Better is not yet good enough
Today’s Ifo index reading is good news and fits into a picture of gradually improving confidence. At the same time, however, there is no reason to start partying. The second consecutive drop in current assessments suggests that the economy could see another quarter of economic contraction. Also, we should not forget that since last summer, there has been some kind of disconnect between hard and soft data. Remember that despite the sharp drop in confidence indicators, the German economy actually grew in the third quarter, and even the small contraction in the fourth should have been much stronger judging from soft indicators. Looking ahead, the question is whether the recent improvement in leading indicators will really translate into positive hard data or whether we could not first see a reversal of last year’s disconnect, i.e. improving soft data but disappointing hard data.
We fear we're in the middle of a structural transition
More generally speaking, the latest improvement in soft data suggests that the German and eurozone economies are in the middle of a typical cyclical recovery, while we fear that we are actually in the middle of a structural transition. If we are right, any rebound this year will be softer and more short-lived than many expect and subdued growth rather than a strong rebound remains the base case. Or in other words: not falling off the cliff is one thing; staging a strong rebound, however, is a different matter. In Germany, industrial orders have weakened since the start of 2022, consumer confidence, despite some recent improvements, is still close to historic lows, the loss of purchasing power will continue in 2023 and the full impact of monetary policy tightening still has to unfold. The Chinese reopening and lower wholesale gas prices are clearly mitigating effects but they're probably not offsetting factors.
All in all, today’s Ifo index suggests that the worst for the German economy should be behind us. However, numbers don't take away the risk of yet another contraction in the first quarter and, thus, a technical recession. The German economy is still miles away from staging a strong rebound.
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