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German Industrial Orders Fell more than Expected in April

June 8 (Reuters) - German industrial orders ​fell more than expected in April, following a ‌strong increase in March, when companies brought forward orders amid fears of price increases due to the war in Iran.

Orders ​declined by 3.8% on the previous month on ​a seasonally and calendar-adjusted basis, the national statistics ⁠office said on Monday.

A Reuters poll of analysts had ​pointed to a fall of 2%.

After revision of the provisional ​data, new orders in March increased by 4.5% on the month, instead of rising by 5.0%.

When large-scale orders are excluded, new ​orders were also 3.8% lower in April than in ​the previous month.

The less volatile three-month on three-month comparison showed that ‌new ⁠orders in the period from February to April were 3.1% lower than in the previous three months.

Foreign orders were down 4.2% in April, with orders from the ​euro zone decreasing ​by 11.1% ⁠and orders from outside the euro zone rising by 0.8%.

Domestic orders declined by 2.9% ​on the month.

In the coming months, uncertainty ​about future ⁠developments in the Middle East is likely to continue to dampen demand for German industrial goods, said Ralph Solveen, ⁠senior ​economist at Commerzbank, adding that ​he expects the German economy to contract in the second quarter.

Additional reporting ​by Isabela Kruczynska, editing by Friederike Heine and Thomas Seythal

Source: Reuters


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