German business confidence rose unexpectedly in January to match November's record high, a survey showed on Thursday, suggesting that Europe's biggest economy continued to fire on all cylinders at the beginning of 2018 despite a stronger euro. The surprisingly bullish figures, released by the Ifo economic institute, bode well for future growth and give Chancellor Angela Merkel a tailwind as she tries to form a coalition government with the centre-left Social Democrats.
The Munich-based Ifo economic institute said its business climate index, based on a monthly survey of some 7,000 firms, rose to 117.6 in January from 117.2 in December. The January reading beat expectations in a Reuters consensus forecast of analysts who had forecast a dip to 117.1.
"The German economy made a dynamic start to the year," Ifo chief Clemens Fuest said in a statement. The overall improvement was driven by managers taking a stronger view of their current business situation, with the respective sub-index hitting a record high, the survey showed.
Business expectations for the next six months were slightly scaled back, while remaining at an overall high level. Unicredit analyst Andreas Rees attributed the drop to the higher oil price and the stronger euro exchange rate, which makes exports to countries outside the single currency bloc more expensive. A sector breakdown of the Ifo figures showed the main support came from manufacturing - where the mood among managers hit a record high - and wholesaling, while sentiment deteriorated in construction and retailing.
"Back to historic high, the euphoric hype of superlatives continues," said Alexander Krueger, economist at Bankhaus Lampe.
"It's interesting to see that the political impasse regarding the formation of a government is apparently perceived by companies as hardly disturbing," Krueger added. The Ifo figures chimed with data released earlier on Thursday that showed German consumer morale rose heading into February to its highest level since 2001, lifted by shoppers' perceptions of a boom in Europe's largest economy.
Household spending has become the main source of economic expansion in Germany as consumers benefit from record-high employment, increased job security, rising real wages and low borrowing costs. The consumer-led upswing has been reinforced by a rebound in exports, propelling German economic growth to a calendar-adjusted 2.5 percent in 2017. For this year, the Ifo institute expects an economic expansion of 2.6 percent.
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