German
manufacturing sector rebounds in Oct after Sept dip: PMI
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[November 03, 2014]
BERLIN, Nov 3 (Reuters) - German
factory activity rebounded in October after shrinking slightly in
September for the first time in over a year, although there are signs of
weak domestic demand in Europe's largest economy, a survey showed on
Monday.
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Markit's Purchasing Manager's Index (PMI) for the manufacturing
sector, which accounts for about a fifth of the economy, climbed to
51.4 from 49.9 in September, bouncing back above the 50 mark that
denotes growth. The final figure was slightly below the flash
reading of 51.8.
Output growth accelerated in October and firms added the most staff
in nearly three years. But the survey also showed new business
falling for a second month, albeit very slightly, as Russian
sanctions and a general economic slowdown weighed on demand, Markit
economist Oliver Kolodseike said.
"Worryingly, the drop in new work was driven by weakening domestic
demand." "Overall, the data send mixed signals about the health of
Germany's manufacturing sector and it is too early to say whether
the sector will be able to sustain growth in the fourth quarter," he
added.
New export contracts rose very slightly. Input prices fell at their
sharpest rate in six months, driven down by lower crude oil and raw
material costs, while output prices increased only marginally,
suggesting inflationary pressures are limited.
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The German economy had a strong start to 2014 but contracted in the
second quarter. Fears about a recession are rife, partly due to euro
zone weakness and a depressed investment climate caused by political
crises abroad. Third-quarter gross domestic product figures are due
out on Nov. 14.
(Reporting by Alexandra Hudson; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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