Euro zone October PMI at near 3-year low, stirring recession worries
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[October 24, 2023] By
Jonathan Cable
LONDON (Reuters) -Euro zone business activity took a surprise turn for
the worse this month as demand fell in a broad-based downturn across the
region, a survey showed, entering the fourth quarter on the wrong foot
and suggesting the bloc may slip into recession.
Tuesday's purchasing managers' survey will likely make disappointing
reading for the European Central Bank, which meets on Thursday, and
market pricing now suggests ECB President Christine Lagarde's
'higher-for-longer' interest rate narrative may not last as some expect.
HCOB's flash euro zone Composite Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI),
compiled by S&P Global and seen as a good guide to overall economic
health, fell to 46.5 in October from September's 47.2 and its lowest
since November 2020.
Outside of the COVID-19 pandemic months it was the lowest reading since
March 2013.
It was well below the 50 level that marks growth in activity and
confounded expectations in a Reuters poll for an uptick to 47.4.
"The flash PMIs mark a poor start to October for the euro zone,
especially after showing some early signs of recovery in September,"
said Rory Fennessy at Oxford Economics.
"If this trend continues, this poses downside risks to our stagnant
growth forecast for Q4."
Suggesting a recession is well underway in Germany, Europe's largest
economy, business activity contracted there for a fourth straight month
as the downturn in manufacturing was matched by a renewed decline in
services, its PMI showed.
Meanwhile, German consumer sentiment is set to fall for a third month in
a row in November, ending any hopes of a recovery this year as
households grapple in particular with high food prices, another survey
showed on Tuesday.
Business activity across France, the euro zone's second largest economy,
saw another solid reduction in October, PMI data showed. While the
contraction softened from September, it was still the second-steepest
decline in close to three years, S&P Global said.
In Britain, outside the European Union, businesses reported another
decline in activity this month, underlining the risk of recession ahead
of the Bank of England's interest rate decision next week.
OUTLOOK DARKENS
Geopolitical tensions heightened by the Middle East conflict pose the
biggest threat to the world economy right now but other risks are also
at play, World Bank President Ajay Banga said on Tuesday.
[to top of second column] |
A shopping trolley is seen as customers shop at a Carrefour
supermarket in Montesson near Paris, France, September 13, 2023.
REUTERS/Sarah Meyssonnier/File Photo
There are fears Israel's military campaign in Gaza following a
deadly attack by Palestinian militant group Hamas on Oct. 7 may
escalate to a regional conflict and Russia's invasion of Ukraine is
ongoing.
While the 20-country euro zone will narrowly dodge a recession,
according to a recent Reuters poll, the economy was expected to have
only flatlined last quarter and will do the same again in the
current one.
Euro zone banks further curbed access to credit last quarter even as
demand fell more than expected amid high borrowing costs and a
deteriorating economic outlook, an ECB survey showed on Tuesday
A chunk of October's business activity was generated by firms
completing backlogs of work and, suggesting they don't expect a
turnaround anytime soon, overall headcount was cut for the first
time since January 2021.
The PMI covering the bloc's dominant services industry sank to a
32-month low of 47.8 from 48.7, below all forecasts in the Reuters
poll which had predicted no change from September.
Demand for services has fallen again this month and at a sharper
rate than in September. The new business index dropped to 45.5 from
46.4, its lowest since the start of 2021.
The manufacturing PMI fell to 43.0 from 43.4, marking its 16th month
below 50 and the lowest since May 2020 when the pandemic was
cementing its grip on the world. The Reuters poll had predicted
43.7.
An index measuring output held steady at 43.1.
Suggesting there won't be a turnaround anytime soon, forward looking
indicators in the survey painted a gloomy picture.
Optimism about the coming 12 months among factory managers waned,
with the future output index dropping to 50.3 from 51.6, marking its
lowest reading this year.
"These surveys do nothing to change our view that the euro zone
economy is likely to contract in Q4 after probably contracting in
Q3," said Andrew Kenningham at Capital Economics.
(Reporting by Jonathan Cable; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Susan
Fenton)
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