Germany Inc.’s outlook for the rest of the year is filled with gloom, suggesting a recession could be in the cards.
Major companies from Europe’s largest economy lead the list of profit warnings issued in the region during the latest earnings season. Daimler AG, BASF SE, Continental AG, Henkel AG, Deutsche Lufthansa AG and Metro AG are among those that have cut their forecasts. Many more have drawn bleak pictures of their prospects.
Adding to the sense of woe, materials maker SGL Carbon SE said late Wednesday its guidance for 2020-2022 is no longer sustainable and Chief Executive Officer Juergen Koehler is stepping down. United Internet AG cut its full-year sales forecast and 1&1 Drillisch AG trimmed its revenue prediction.
At the heart of companies’ concerns are weaker global growth, dwindling demand from China, and trade tariffs—factors that hurt Germany’s export-heavy industrial sector in particular.
Industrial companies have fared worst during the second-quarter earnings season. Expectations for German businesses were comparatively low, but even so, only 41% of them managed to beat sales estimates. The ratio is well above 50% in France, Italy and Spain.
The consequences are starting to be felt. Unemployment rose by a total of 62,000 in the three months through July and demand for new workers continued to soften.
That’s bad news for a country hoping to make up dwindling exports with consumption and investment. Domestic demand still supported the economy in the second quarter but that might change once uncertain prospects prompt companies and households to rein in spending.
Economists at Deutsche Bank AG and ABN Amro Group NV see Germany’s economy contracting again in the third quarter, pushing the nation in recession—it’s first in six and a half years. Many more analysts say the risk of such a scenario has increased significantly after Wednesday’s report.
European banks are already preparing for an economic slump. Loan-loss provisions have risen for a second quarter, after declining during all of 2016 and 2017.
Shares in Commerzbank AG, which has revamped its business model to focus on lending to corporate and individual clients in Germany, have slumped to a record low.
“Earnings are shrinking and entire sectors are in deep crisis,” said Andreas Lipkow, a strategist at Comdirect Bank AG. “The current effects of the trade conflict between the U.S. and China have noticeably arrived at German export companies.”