European
business activity falls to near three-year low
Activity
at European businesses hit a near three-year low in May, according to
a survey by Markit
BBC,
24
May, 2012
Its
index, based on a survey of purchasing managers in the manufacturing
and service sector, fell to 45.9 in May, a 35-month low.
In
response, the euro fell to $1.2515 against the dollar, a 22-month
low.
A
summit of European leaders on Wednesday evening failed to boost
confidence, as leaders disagreed over how to tackle the crisis.
French
President Francois Hollande pushed for pan-European bonds, that would
allow struggling nations to raise money at much lower interest rates.
But
Germany says it will oppose such a scheme until there is more budget
discipline across Europe.
The
political crisis in Greece was also under discussion.
EU
leaders said they wanted Greece to remain in the eurozone, but
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy said it should "respect
its commitments".
Thursday's
economic reports show that concerns over Greece are having a broader
economic impact, according to economists.
Markit's
chief economist, Chris Williamson, said his firm's research indicated
that the European downturn "gathered further momentum in May".
"The
survey is broadly consistent with gross domestic product falling by
at least 0.5% across the region in the second quarter, as an
increasingly steep downturn in the periphery infects both France and
Germany," he said in the report.
Activity
at French and German factories fell to the lowest level in almost
three years, according to the Markit survey.
'Not
good'
"The
flash PMI figures for May look horrible and provide a clear warning
that eurozone GDP will almost certainly show a contraction in the
second quarter after stagnating in the first quarter," said
Martin Van Vliet, from the bank ING.
"It's
not good," said Peter Dixon from Commerzbank.
"The
German ones were particularly disappointing, as we had been expecting
some more buoyancy.
"It
clearly indicates that the evaporating sentiment that we have seen in
recent weeks, as the Greece crisis has intensified, is having a big
impact on the economy."
A
separate report from Germany's Ifo showed that business confidence
fell sharply in Germany in May.
The
Ifo business climate index, which is based on a survey of 7,000
executives, fell to 106.9 in May, down from 109.9 in April.
Investors
have been seeking the safety of German and UK government bonds.
Prices of these bonds rose, driving interest rates on 10-year UK and
German government debt to record lows.
Hole
Deepens for Euro Zone
Concerns
Over Greek Exit Hit Economic Benchmarks, Even in Germany; Draghi
Urges Boosting Growth
WSJ,
24
May, 2012
Business
activity in the euro zone contracted at its steepest rate in nearly
three years in May, a closely watched survey showed, as even powerful
Germany buckled under the strain of southern Europe's escalating debt
crisis.
The
data compounded fears that Greece's possible exit from the euro zone
has touched off a downward economic spiral that threatens strong and
fragile countries alike. It also opened the door to additional
stimulus from the European Central Bank via interest-rate cuts to
spur growth, some economists said.
Sentiment
fell sharply in Germany. For the past two years, its firms have
shrugged off the crisis in Greece and Spain, as their export order
books were filled by fast-growing emerging markets such as China. But
uncertainty over the chaos that a Greek exit could unleash appears to
be denting confidence in Europe's most powerful economy.
Reflecting
the sense of urgency, ECB President Mario Draghi on Thursday implored
governments to define their vision for the euro "in a joint and
irreversible way" and to implement measures to boost the bloc's
growth potential.
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