The
Ifo institute's closely watched business climate index dropped
to 88.6, its lowest in more than two years and below the 90.2
forecast in a Reuters poll of analysts. June's reading was
marginally revised down to 92.2.
"Recession is knocking on the door. That can no longer be ruled
out," said Ifo surveys head Klaus Wohlrabe.
Germany faces the threat of gas rationing unprecedented in
generations this winter following a significant drop in supplies
from Russia, whose president, Vladimir Putin, the West accuses
of weaponising energy in response to sanctions levied against
him over the war in Ukraine.
Russia says it is conducting a "special military operation"
there to fight nationalists.
Russia this month shut down the Nord Stream 1 pipeline that
supplies Germany with gas via the bed of the Baltic Sea for 10
days of maintenance that some feared would be extended.
Pumping resumed on Thursday, but at only 40% of capacity.
Wohlrabe told Reuters in an interview that if German gas
deliveries continued at that level "there will be no recession."
However, Germany's gas network regulator said on Friday that, if
gas through the pipeline continued to be pumped at only 40%, the
country would need to take "additional measures" to reach the
90% of storage capacity set as a target to avert winter
rationing.
The government has said it would prioritise residents over the
corporate sector in the event of rationing, and Monday's Ifo
index, which surveys about 9,000 firms, showed expectations for
business to significantly worsen in the coming months.
"The Ifo business climate index, like the purchasing managers'
index, now clearly points to a downturn in the German economy,"
said Commerzbank economic analyst Jorge Kraemer.
"How bad it ends up unfortunately lies mainly in Putin hands."
S&P Global's flash Purchasing Managers' Index (PM) for German
services and its index for manufacturing both fell to 49.2 in
July, data showed on Friday, below analyst forecasts for them to
hold above the 50 mark that separates growth from contraction.
(Reporting by Rachel More and Miranda Murray; editing by John
Stonestreet)
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