Euro zone growth shrinks on inventories

A steep drop in inventories and investment led to a record contraction for the euro zone economy in the first three months of…

A steep drop in inventories and investment led to a record contraction for the euro zone economy in the first three months of 2009, but the depleted stockpiles raised hopes for a better performance in the second quarter.

A steep drop in inventories and investment led to a record contraction for the euro zone economy in the first three months of 2009, but the depleted stockpiles raised hopes for a better performance in the second quarter.

The European Union's statistics office confirmed its earlier estimate that gross domestic product in the 16 countries using the euro fell 2.5 per cent on the quarter, and revised the year-on-year contraction to 4.8 per cent from 4.6 per cent.

“In short, a horrendous report. Things can only get better,” said Martin van Vliet, economist at ING.

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Eurostat also said today that prices at euro zone factory gates logged their biggest annual fall on record in April, pointing to negative inflation in coming months and possibly more monetary easing from the European Central Bank.

Producer prices fell 1 per cent month-on-month and 4.6 per cent annually, the biggest drop since EU measurements started in 1996 and more than expected by economists. A dip in energy costs drove the decline.

Euro zone unemployment hit a near 10-year high of 9.2 per cent in April, Eurostat had said yesterday, just days ahead of EU parliamentary elections in which the worst economic downturn since World War Two is a major factor.

The data could prompt the ECB to consider more monetary easing, although more analysts believe the bank reached the end of the easing cycle after it cut rates to 1 per cent in May.

Producer prices show inflationary pressures early in the pipeline as their moves are usually reflected later in consumer prices, which the ECB wants to grow by just under 2 per cent year-on-year.

“The key challenge for ... the ECB is to ensure that the temporary period of negative inflation, resulting from lower energy and food prices, does not become embedded in people's expectations,” ING's van Vliet said.

The main reason behind the first-quarter economic contraction was a plunge in inventories, which subtracted a full percentage point from the final quarterly result. Private investment took away another 0.9 percentage point.

But inventories will have to be rebuilt after such a steep fall, economists said. “Along with recent leading indicators, this indicates that the pace of GDP contraction should diminish markedly from Q2,” said Ken Wattret, economist at BNP Paribas.

Reuters