German Factory Orders Unexpectedly Rise by 2.9% in July on Large Orders
According to data from Destatis,
New orders in other vehicle construction (aircraft, ships, trains, military vehicles) surged 86.5% in July.
Orders for the manufacture of electrical equipment jumped 18.6%.
However, orders across the mechanical engineering sector slid by 6.1%.
Excluding large orders, incoming orders were down 0.4%.
Looking at the broader sectors of the German economy:
Orders across the capital goods sector increased by 3.5% in July, while the intermediate goods sector saw orders up 4.4%.
The consumer goods sector reported a 5.8% fall in new orders.
Orders from overseas advanced by 5.1%, with orders from within the Eurozone increasing by 5.9%.
New orders from outside the Eurozone rose by 4.6%.
However, domestic orders remained unchanged.
From May to July 2024, factory orders were 1.0% higher than in the previous three months.
The July increase in factory orders contrasted with weaker new order trends in the Manufacturing PMI surveys, easing recession risks. According to August’s HCOB Manufacturing PMI survey, inflows of new work fell at the sharpest rate since November 2023, with new export orders also falling markedly. The Manufacturing PMI fell from 43.2 in July to 42.4 in August.
German Factory Orders and the ECB Rate Path
Survey-based economic indicators from Germany suggested an increasing risk of a deep economic recession.
However, the factory order figures paint a rosier picture of the German economy. The upbeat factory order data may ease fears of a lengthy German recession. Nonetheless, the numbers are unlikely to influence the ECB rate path. The ECB remains primarily focused on the services sector and inflation.
EUR/USD Reaction to the Factory Order Slide
Before the factory order report, the EUR/USD climbed to a high of $1.10865 before falling to a low of $1.10746.
This article was originally published by a www.fxempire.com
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