Economic news

German Exporters Stay Upbeat Despite Iran War, Allianz Trade

BERLIN, April 8 (Reuters) - German exporters are still broadly optimistic about growth in overseas sales despite the Iran ​war, although concerns over payment delays, supply chains and ‌geopolitical risks are rising, Allianz Trade said on Wednesday.

In a survey taken before the U.S. and Iran agreed to a ​two-week ceasefire, the trade credit insurer said 83% of ​German firms still expected export revenues to rise ⁠in 2026 above the global average of 75%. Some ​6,000 companies across 13 markets participated in the survey.

Most German ​exporters expect only moderate growth over the next 12 months, however, and sentiment remains fragile.

TRADE WAR WORRIES OUTWEIGH MIDDLE EAST CONFLICT

Allianz ​Trade said the impact of the Iran war on ​exporters' expectations had so far been limited compared with the shock ‌caused ⁠by trade tensions in 2025.

At the same time, German firms were more pessimistic about the fallout of the U.S. trade war than they were immediately after "Liberation Day" ​a year ago ​when U.S. ⁠President Donald Trump announced his tariff plans, with 49% expecting negative effects in 2026.

Nearly ​half of German exporters expect worsening payment ​behaviour and ⁠40% envisage a rise in payment defaults.

The biggest risks cited in the survey were geopolitical tensions, supply-chain disruption, and ⁠payment ​delays.

Allianz Trade said Europe and ​Asia were becoming more attractive destinations for future export growth, while the ​U.S. was losing appeal.

Reporting by Maria Martinez Editing by Madeline Chambers

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree