SEB report: Eurozone out of recession but slow recovery

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    Euro zone: Out of recession but slow recoveryTUESDAY

    OCTOBER 8, 2013

    After six quarters of recession, euro zone GDP finally grew again in the second quarter of2013. We foresee a positive trend in GDP, current account, government deficits andunemployment, but very troubling levels of these variables will hold back demand. Theeuro zone is on a less unstable footing, and the intensity of the crisis is lower, but it is farfrom over. We see stabilisation at the moment; recovery is still a bit ahead of us.

    Developments so far since the August issue of Nordic Outlookare in line with ourforecast. Following the 0.3 per cent quarter-on-quarter growth in the second quarter of2013, we expect zero q/q growth in the third quarter and 0.2 per cent in the fourth. Thefourth quarter of 2013 will be the first with positive year-on-year growth figures. GDPwill decline by 0.5 per cent in 2013 and increase by 0.8 per cent in 2014 and 1.7 percent in 2015.

    The European Central Bank has promised to do whatever it takes to save the euro, butpositive data showing that the euro zone has left its recession behind has had afavourable effect on financial markets. Since the start of 2013, government bond yieldshave continued to fall in the crisis-hit GIIPS countries. We expect that partly due to weakgrowth, low inflation, politicians not moving fast enough with reforms and problems

    associated with a still weak banking sector in southern Europe, the ECB will cut its refirate by 25 basis points in December and that further LTRO lending is likely.

    Daniel BergvallSEB Research

    +46 8 763 85 94

    GDP forecastsPer cent

    2012 2013 2014

    Euro zone -0.6 -0.5 0.8

    France 0.0 0.2 0.8

    Germany 0.7 0.5 1.7

    Italy -2.8 -1.7 0.6

    Spain -1.9 -1.4 0.4

    Source: SEB

    Key dataPercentage change

    2012 2013 2014 2015

    GDP* -0.6 -0.5 0.8 1.7

    Unemployment** 11.4 12.1 12.0 11.5

    Inflation* 2.5 1.5 1.0 0.9

    Government deficit*** -3.7 -2.9 -2.5 -1.9

    * Percentage change, ** Per cent of labour force, *** Per cent of GDP

    Source: Eurostat, SEB

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]
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    Economic Insights

    INDICATORS, CONSUMPTION AND GDP

    Indicators support the view that we will see a continuous but slow improvement. For the big four (Germany,France, Italy and Spain), composite purchasing managers indices are close to the expansion threshold of 50. Inmanufacturing, the situation seems a bit brighter, with PMIs for the big four converging just above 50 (except thatFrance is just below 50). Since May, there has also been continuous improvement in the European CommissionsEconomic Sentiment Indicator (ESI). In August, the euro zone ESI rose to 95.2 from 92.5 in July. The different

    strengths of the economies are more visible in the ESI than the PMI, with Germany at a higher level than France, Italyand Spain. Also, the ESI is currently above its historical average in Germany but below it in France.

    Consumer confidence has improved in France, Italy and Spain, although the figures are still clearly belowGermany. In August, the increase in retail sales excluding autos was just above zero and vehicle registration wasstill falling (as it has been in all months of 2013 except July).

    Germanys IFO business sentiment index has trended higher since April. Even if we expect growth in thesecond half of 2013 to be weaker than the strong figure for the second quarter, Germany will outperform most of itseuro zone partners in 2014 and 2015.

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    Economic Insights

    LABOUR MARKET AND INDUSTRY

    The labour market is still weak and unemployment has been stable at a historically high 12 per cent since thestart of 2013. One positive sign is that the number of unemployed fell for the third straight month in August,although by only 5,000 people, with over 19 million unemployed (12 per cent, unchanged since July). On thenegative side, employment continued to fall during the first quarter of 2013 (-1,0 per cent) and there are signs thatdecreased labour force participation is contributing to unemployment not reaching even higher levels.

    There is still a mixed picture in the labour market, with German unemployment showing strength (a historically low5,2 per cent in August, by Eurostats definition), in France levelling out at 11 per cent and in Spain and Italy just over26 and 12 per cent respectively. Irelands jobless rate seems to have peaked and but is only marginally down during2013, underscoring that making unemployment fall will be a long, drawn-out process for crisis-ridden countries.

    In the second quarter of 2013, capacity utilisation improved but industrial production remained weak. In July,industrial production continued to fall but an improvement in manufacturing sector confidence indicators (both theEuropean Commission measure and PMI) is signalling that performance will improve during the rest of 2013.

    Portugal and Spain have seen their exports grow surprisingly strongly in recent months: a positive sign that internaldevaluations are paying off, but it is still too early to say that this is an improving trend.

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    Economic Insights

    INFLATION, FINANCIAL AND MONETARY INDICATORS

    Inflationary pressure is still low and the euro zone inflation rate in September (flash estimate) was 1.1 per cent,down from 1.3 per cent a month earlier. We expect inflation pressure to remain subdued both in the near termand over the next couple of years,given an expected slow economic recovery, high unemployment and low wagepressure. We foresee HICP inflation of 1.5 per cent in 2013, 1.0 per cent in 2014 and 0.9 per cent in 2015 . Lowinflation makes debt adjustment more complicated.

    Even though the general economic outlook is getting more stable, developments are fragile and events that fueluncertainty are keeping the heat up. Political turbulence in countries like Portugal and Italy, as well as when andwhere we will see additional support and easing of the debt burden, are examples. The road ahead will be bumpy,affecting financial markets and growth negatively, but we do not believe that developments will be severe enoughto create a situation similar to 2008-2009.

    The ECBs current stand-by policy will come under increasing pressure, due to low and falling inflation, repayment ofearlier Long-Term Refinancing Operation (LTRO) loans that will reduce surplus liquidity and weak bank lending. Nonew policy measures have been announced, but continued verbal interventions will not be enough. We expect theECBs policy to change and continue to forecast that it will cut the refi rate at its December 2013 meeting by 25bp to 0.25 per cent. In addition, additional LTRO loans may be necessary if liquidity drops further. Surplus liquidityclose to EUR 200 bn has been associated with a rise in the Euro Overnight Index Average (EONIA), which the ECB

    does not want to see.

    Bank lending to non-financial corporations is continuing to fall. Declining GDP combined with weak indicatorsmake companies hesitant about capital investment decisions, reducing the demand for new loans. Cross-borderbanking flows are falling, and even though ECBs refi rate is low, lending rates to small and medium-sizedenterprises (SMEs) diverge, with higher rates in southern and eastern euro zone members than in northern ones.This is a pressing issue, especially since such countries as Spain, Portugal and Italy have a larger share ofemployment in SMEs than Germany, France or Finland.

    Getting rid of the debt overhang. IMF research has shown that in previous deleveraging processes, growth andinflation not reducing nominal debt have been the main drivers. The outlook for the euro zone indicates thatthese factors will not contribute much in the near term, making the process more painful.