BLBG:Euro Areaâs Recession Seen Over as Champagne Kept on Ice
The euro-area economy probably edged back to growth last quarter for the first time since 2011, ending the longest recession since the single currency union started 14 years ago.
Gross domestic product in the 17-nation region expanded 0.2 percent in the three months through June after shrinking for the previous six quarters, according to the median of 41 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. The European Unionâs statistics office in Luxembourg will release the data on Aug. 14. Germany probably grew about 0.75 percent, according to a government estimate, exceeding the 0.6 percent economists predict.
A year of relative calm on financial markets, budget cuts from Spain to Italy and accelerating growth in the U.S., the worldâs biggest economy, have helped the euro area start to recover. While the overall outlook has improved, the recession has left the region with a youth unemployment rate of 24 percent, and parts of southern Europe remain mired in a slump.
âThe external environment is really getting better, led by signs that U.S. demand is picking up,â said Nick Kounis, head of macro research at ABN Amro Bank NV in Amsterdam. âThe second quarter should mark the end of the recession in the euro area, but the recovery will be excruciatingly slow. Weâre not getting the champagne out yet.â
The euro slipped 0.3 percent to $1.3299 as of 9:22 a.m. London time. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index declined 0.2 percent after advancing 0.6 percent last week to a 10-week high.
Slowing Contractions
European Central Bank President Mario Draghi has described progress as âtentative.â Against that backdrop, the ECB has cut interest rates to their lowest-ever level and Draghi has pledged theyâll stay there or lower for an âextended period.â
Spainâs economy shrank just 0.1 percent in the second quarter from the prior three months. Still, the countryâs youth unemployment is 56 percent. In Italy, where Prime Minister Enrico Letta is easing last yearâs budget austerity, GDP fell a less-than-forecast 0.2 percent.
Economic confidence in the euro area increased for a third month in July. Manufacturing expanded for the first time in two years, according to a purchasing-managers survey by London-based Markit Economics.
Adecco SA (ADEN), the worldâs largest provider of temporary workers, reported increased profit for the second-quarter, and the Glattbrugg, Switzerland-based company said it sees more positive signs for business as Europeâs labor markets stabilize.
German Growth
As the pain in Europeâs periphery has eased, German growth has strengthened. The Economy Ministry said on Aug. 9 that the regionâs biggest economy expanded âmarkedlyâ in the second quarter, driven by private consumption and industrial production.
Chancellor Angela Merkel will seek a third term as German leader on Sept. 22 on the strength of shielding her country from the worst effects of the euro areaâs debt crisis. The Federal Statistics Office will release second-quarter GDP data before the euro-area number on Aug. 14.
Financial markets have largely avoided the volatility that marked previous years even as a change in Italyâs government stalled, Portugalâs coalition faltered, and Cyprus required a messy bailout. Draghi has cited the ECBâs unlimited bond-buying pledge, announced last year and so far untapped, as a reason for calmer markets. Yields on Spanish and Italian sovereign bonds have fallen in the past 12 months.
âIt all looks a bit better than we thought,â said Evelyn Herrmann, an economist at BNP Paribas SA in London. âOur central case is a very modest recovery, and weâre still not overly bullish for the second half of the year.â
Lending Decline
One area of stress remains corporate access to credit. Lending to companies and households across the region fell the most on record in June. A review of banksâ balance sheets to be conducted by the ECB has probably been delayed until the first quarter of 2014 as the central bank says it canât start preparing until EU lawmakers vote on the legislation, which wonât be before September.
The review is part of a plan to strengthen the regionâs financial system by building a banking union comprising ECB oversight, a single resolution mechanism for winding up failing lenders, and common rules for deposit guarantees.
In the meantime, economic performance remains patchy. An unexpected 1.4 percent drop in French industrial production in June underlined the governmentâs struggle to revive growth in the regionâs second largest economy. France is also due to release data for second-quarter GDP on Aug. 14.
âConstrainedâ
âThe upside for domestic demand in the euro zone is likely to remain constrained,â said Howard Archer, chief European economist at IHS Global Insight in London, citing ârestrictive fiscal policy,â and âelevatedâ unemployment.
The euro areaâs path out of recession will also be determined by conditions in major export markets such as the U.K., the U.S. and China. There, indications are improving.
In China, July industrial output rose more than expected after a larger-than-forecast rebound in exports eased concern that a credit squeeze in the worldâs second-biggest economy would curb growth. The U.S. economy grew at a 1.7 percent annualized rate from April through June after a 1.1 percent pace in the first quarter.
For the whole of 2013, the ECB forecasts a contraction for the euro-area economy of 0.6 percent, before an expansion of 1.1 percent in 2014.
âThereâs still some fiscal adjustment going on and thatâs weighing on consumption, as well as banks in the south not being in a position to support the economy,â said Laurence Boone, chief European economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in London. âThe consensus is for slight growth and we wouldnât expect anything much more buoyant than that.â
To contact the reporter on this story: Jeff Black in Frankfurt at jblack25@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Craig Stirling at cstirling1@bloomberg.net