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German Business Sentiment Falls, Iran War Hits Upswing Hopes

  • Ifo index fell to 86.4 in March from 88.4 in February
  • Iran war impacts German economic recovery, says Ifo's Fuest
  • Decline in headline index driven by falling expectations

BERLIN, March 25 (Reuters) - German business morale fell sharply in March, as the ‌Iran war made companies more pessimistic and threatened the long-awaited recovery of Europe's biggest economy.

"The war in Iran has, for the time being, ended hopes of an economic upswing," said Clemens Fuest, president of the Ifo institute ​that on Wednesday said its business climate index fell to 86.4 in March compared ​with a revised 88.4 in February.

Analysts had forecast it would drop to 86.1.

"The ⁠recovery is stuck in the Strait of Hormuz," said Sebastian Wanke, economist at KfW, adding that ​with every week that the Iran war continues, business sentiment is depressed further and the economy ​is held back.

The decline in the headline index was due to significantly more pessimistic expectations, which fell to 86.0 in March from 90.2 in February as uncertainty among companies increased.

Assessments of the current situation, however, remained unchanged ​at 86.7.

WAR COULD DERAIL RECOVERY

"If the war and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz were ​to continue for another one or two months, the economic damage to Germany would be clearly noticeable," said Joerg ‌Kraemer, ⁠chief economist at Commerzbank.

In line with the decline in the Ifo index, the on Tuesday showed Germany's private sector growth slowed to its weakest pace in three months in March as services lost momentum and the Middle East conflict drove freight and energy costs higher.

"The fall in ​the German Ifo index ​and the composite PMI ⁠in March suggest that the renewed rise in energy prices could derail the tentative recovery in the German economy," said Franziska Palmas, senior Europe ​economist at Capital Economics.

While the Ifo business climate index fell across all ​sectors, the PMIs ⁠showed an improvement in manufacturing activity and a deterioration in services.

Palmas said Germany will be more resilient than in 2022 because the rise in energy prices has been much smaller so far and a ⁠lot ​of the least profitable energy-intensive production has already been permanently ​lost.

"But GDP may still stagnate in the middle of the year," she said, cutting forecasts to 0.5% growth from 0.8% ​before the conflict started.

Reporting by Maria Martinez and and Thomas Seythal Editing by Miranda Murray and Alexander Smith

Source: Reuters


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