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German Consumer Sentiment Barely Improves Heading into Holiday Season -GfK

BERLIN, Nov 28 (Reuters) - German consumer sentiment improved slightly heading into the Christmas month but remained at a very low level with no signs of sustainable recovery in Europe's biggest economy, a survey showed on Tuesday.

The consumer sentiment index rose by 0.5 points to -27.8 points heading into December from a revised -28.3 the month before and above expectations of analysts polled by Reuters for a -27.9 reading.

An improved willingness to buy and less appetite to save pushed the index, published jointly by the GfK institute and the Nuremberg Institute for Market Decisions (NIM), slightly upwards.

"After three consecutive months of decline, consumer sentiment is stabilising as the year draws to a close," said Rolf Buerkl, consumption expert at NIM.

"The mood is still characterised by uncertainty and concern."

 

DEC 2023

NOV 2023

DEC 2022

Consumer climate

-27.8

-28.3

-40.1

Consumer climate components

NOV 2023

OCT 2023

NOV 2022

- willingness to buy

-15.0

-16.3

-18.6

- income expectations

-16.7

-15.3

-54.3

- business cycle expectations

-2.3

-2.4

-17.9

NOTE - The survey period was from Nov. 2-13, 2023.

The consumer climate indicator forecasts the progress of real private consumption in the following month.

An indicator reading above zero signals year-on-year growth in private consumption. A value below zero indicates a drop compared with the same period a year earlier.

According to GfK, a one-point change in the indicator corresponds to a year-on-year change of 0.1% in private consumption.

The "willingness to buy" indicator represents the balance between positive and negative responses to the question: "Do you think now is a good time to buy major items?"

The income expectations sub-index reflects expectations about the development of household finances in the coming 12 months.

The additional business cycle expectations index reflects respondents' assessment of the general economic situation over the next 12 months.

Reporting by Riham Alkousaa, Editing by Rachel More and Sharon Singleton

Source: Reuters


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