Friday, February 13, 2009

Europe Is In Its Deepest Recession!

Posted on cnbc.

  • The euro zone economy saw its deepest contraction on record in the fourth quarter of 2008, data showed on Friday, boosting pressure on the European Central Bank to cut interest rates by 50 basis points in three weeks.

    Gross domestic product in the 15 countries using the euro in the last three months of 2008 shrank 1.5 percent against the previous quarter for a 1.2 percent fall year-on-year, the European Union statistics office Eurostat said on Friday.

    "Now it's official: the euro zone economy is in its deepest recession since the end of the Second World War," said Christoph Weil, economist at Commerzbank.

    "The collapse of exports and a sharp fall in investments were most probably the main reasons for the slump," he said.

    Economists polled by Reuters had expected a 1.3 percent quarterly drop after 0.2 percent contractions in the second and third quarters, and a 1.1 percent year-on-year decline.

    "This Friday the 13th is living up to its name. Eurostat has just released 'scary' GDP numbers," said Martin van Vliet, economist at ING.

    "The best we can hope is that the fourth quarter marked the worst quarter in terms of the pace of contraction," he said.

read rest of the news here: http://www.cnbc.com/id/29176693

See also Europe's Economy Shrinks Most Since 1995 as ECB Considers Deeper Rate Cuts

  • Feb. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Europe’s economy contracted the most in at least 13 years in the fourth quarter, compounding pressure on the European Central Bank to reduce interest rates to the lowest ever next month.

    Gross domestic product in the euro region declined 1.5 percent from the previous three months, the European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said today. That was more than the 1.3 percent economists expected and the most since euro-area GDP records began in 1995. From a year earlier, GDP fell 1.2 percent in the fourth quarter, the only full-year drop on record.

    With the first recession in the euro’s 10-year history deepening, companies from carmaker Renault SA to software-maker SAP AG are cutting jobs and scaling back production. Six ECB policy makers, including President Jean-Claude Trichet, have said the central bank may cut rates to a record low from the current 2 percent and consider other measures to stimulate growth.

    “The news is dire,” said Kenneth Wattret, senior economist at BNP Paribas SA in London who correctly forecast today’s data. “Compared to the early 1990s recession, which was painful,
    this is twice as big.”

    The economies of both Germany and France, the two largest in the euro region, shrank by the most in more than two decades in the latest quarter. Spain, Italy, the Netherlands and Austria also contracted in the final three months of last year, national statistics offices reported. The U.K. economy, the euro area’s biggest trading partner, shrank 1.5 percent in the quarter.

    ‘More Radical’

    For the euro region, “we see at least another three quarters of contraction, and we should brace for a huge rise in unemployment,” BNP’s Wattret said. “The ECB will cut by at least half a point next month and may have to consider something even more radical.”

    The euro interbank offered rate, or Euribor, for three-month loans fell to a record low on speculation the ECB will reduce its key rate next month. The rate dropped two basis points to 1.94 percent today, the European Banking Federation said.

    That is the lowest since the euro’s introduction in 1999 and down from a record 5.39 percent on Oct. 10. The three-month euro overnight index average rate, which shows traders’ expectations for the central bank’s key rate, was at 0.98 percent, down from 1.2 percent at the end of January and 1.73 percent on Dec. 31.

    ECB board members Lucas Papademos, Juergen Stark and Jose Manuel Gonzalez Paramo as well as Spanish central bank Governor Angel Fernandez Ordonez and Belgian Governor Guy Quaden said this week that the Frankfurt-based bank may cut rates next month.

    ‘Difficult Year’

    “The latest data and survey indicators point to a substantial decline in real gross domestic product in the fourth quarter,” ECB Vice President Papademos said on Feb. 11. “
    Stormier weather may still lie ahead,” and “a further easing of monetary policy may be appropriate” in March.

    The economic slump may leave European policy makers under pressure at this weekend’s meeting in Rome of finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of Seven industrial nations. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner plans to encourage colleagues to take “bold actions” to reverse the economic and financial crisis, according to a U.S. Treasury official, and the Bank of England has announced plans to start buying commercial paper.

    The contraction in Europe “is worse than the U.S.,” said Jim O’Neill, chief economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in London. “Given the shock started in the U.S., that’s quite an achievement.”

    The U.S. economy contracted 1 percent in the fourth quarter from the prior three months, when it shrank 0.1 percent, according to the EU statistics office. From the year-earlier quarter, U.S. GDP declined 0.2 percent.

    Economic Slump

    In Europe, demand for everything from software to cars is withering. SAP, the world’s biggest maker of business-management software, said on Jan. 28 that it will slash more than 3,000 jobs and freeze salaries this year as the economic slump hurts demand. European car sales plunged 27 percent in January to the lowest level in two decades, the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association said in Brussels today.

    Infineon Technologies AG Chief Executive Officer Peter Bauer said yesterday that Europe’s second-largest maker of semiconductors faces a “difficult year” filled with “many tough challenges.”

    The global economy will grow the least since World War II this year as more than $2 trillion of losses from the financial crisis cripple banks, the International Monetary Fund predicted Jan. 28. The euro region will contract 2 percent in 2009, the IMF forecast. Today’s data showed the euro-area economy expanded 0.7 percent last year, down from 2.7 percent in 2007.

    The ECB in January cut the benchmark rate to 2 percent, the lowest in the bank’s 10-year history, and kept the rate unchanged on Feb. 5. The next decision is due March 5.

    “The economy took a breathtaking turn for the worse at the end of last year,” said Nick Kounis, an economist at Fortis Bank NV in Amsterdam. “The figures so far add to the already strong case for the ECB to do more.”

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