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Euro-Area Sentiment Drops for Ninth Month Amid Bleaker Outlook

Euro-Area Sentiment Drops for Ninth Month Amid Bleaker Outlook

(Bloomberg) -- Economic confidence in the euro area sank for a ninth month in March, suggesting the region’s slowdown hasn’t yet bottomed out.

Sentiment soured markedly in industry, and sharp drops in Italy and Germany highlight the precarious situation in two of the region’s largest economies. With the former in recession and the latter narrowly avoiding one, the European Central Bank cut its euro-area growth outlook this month and repeated a warning about downside risks.

Euro-Area Sentiment Drops for Ninth Month Amid Bleaker Outlook

The European Commission’s headline index, which assesses the mood of households and businesses, fell more than economists expected and is now at its lowest level in more than two years.

Euro Area Actual Prior
Economic Sentiment 105.5106.2
Industry-1.7-0.4
Services 11.312.1
Consumer -7.2-7.4
Business Climate0.530.69

To grease the wheels for the economy, ECB officials announced new loans and committed to keep borrowing costs low for longer. Yet in the three weeks since then, figures have shown the contraction in Germany’s manufacturing sector worsened and business activity in France unexpectedly declined.

Even so, unemployment in the bloc is at the lowest in almost six years and there’s even evidence of wages rising, fueling consumer spending. Bank of France Governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau has stressed that the region is in a slowdown, not a recession, and the ECB’s chief economist said the situation shouldn’t worsen further.

“We are seeing a stabilization of the economy right now, but it’s conditional on the development of a number of geopolitical uncertainties,” Peter Praet said in an interview, mentioning Brexit and international trade. “We are confident, but up to a point: Our scenario is based on the assumption that political uncertainties, if they don’t disappear fully, will at least be contained.”

--With assistance from Kristian Siedenburg, Catarina Saraiva and Harumi Ichikura.

To contact the reporter on this story: Catherine Bosley in Zurich at cbosley1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Fergal O'Brien at fobrien@bloomberg.net, Jana Randow

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