German Factory Orders Plummet as Manufacturing Drags on Economy

German factory orders fell the most since the pandemic as manufacturing continued to fare worse than other parts of Europe’s largest economy.

(Bloomberg) — German factory orders fell the most since the pandemic as manufacturing continued to fare worse than other parts of Europe’s largest economy. 

Demand declined 10.7% in March, more than estimated by a single economists in a Bloomberg poll that predicted a 2.3% drop. The slump was particularly pronounced in the car and car parts industry. 

Manufacturers have been relying on a large backlog of orders to sustain production as bottlenecks that emerged during the Covid pandemic disappear. Services have been doing better recently amid robust demand from consumers. 

“Prospects are worsening” for manufacturers in the euro zone amid a “divergence across sectors of the economy,” European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said Thursday.

That chimes with surveys by S&P Global, which have showed activity accelerating in Germany’s services industry, while factories slowed down amid waning demand. 

BMW AG cautioned on Thursday that the global economic and political outlook remains uncertain and tense. That view has echoed across the industry recently by competitors including Volkswagen AG and Mercedes-Benz Group AG.

–With assistance from Barbara Sladkowska and Kristian Siedenburg.

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