| Click for the Finfacts Ireland Portal Homepage |

Finfacts Business News Centre

   
Home 
 
 News
 Irish
 Irish Economy
 EU Economy
 US Economy
 UK Economy
 Global Economy
 International
 Property
 Innovation
 
 Analysis/Comment
 
 Asia Economy

RSS FEED


How to use our RSS feed

 
Web Finfacts

See Search Box lower down this column for searches of Finfacts news pages. Where there may be the odd special character missing from an older page, it's a problem that developed when Interactive Tools upgraded to a new content management system.

Welcome

Finfacts is Ireland's leading business information site and you are in its business news section.

We provide access to live business television and business related videos from: Bloomberg TV; The Wall Street Journal; CNBC and the Financial Times. Click image:

Links

Finfacts Homepage

Irish Share Prices

Euribor Daily Rates

Irish Economy

Global Income Per Capita

Global Cost of Living

Irish Tax 2008

Climate Change Reports

Global News

Bloomberg News

CNN Money

Cnet Tech News

Newspapers

Irish Independent

Irish Times

Irish Examiner

New York Times

Financial Times

Technology News

 

Feedback

 

Content Management by interactivetools.com.

News : EU Economy Last Updated: Sep 30, 2009 - 7:32:52 AM


Eurozone Retail September PMI in sixteenth consecutive monthly fall - - smallest monthly decline since June 2008
By Finfacts Team
Sep 29, 2009 - 8:30:03 AM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

An image of the planned new headquarters of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt. The construction is expected to be completed by 2011.

The Markit Eurozone Retail PMI (Purchasing Managers’ Index), based on a mid-month survey of more than 1,000 executives in the retail sector, indicated a sixteenth consecutive monthly fall in same-store retail sales in September. However, after accounting for seasonal influences, the PMI rose from 47.1 in August to 48.6, signalling the smallest monthly decline seen since sales began falling in June 2008.

Of the big-three Eurozone economies monitored  - - which together account for 62% of Eurozone retail turnover - - France recorded the best performance, being the only country to show an increase in sales compared with August. Although only marginal, the monthly rise was the first since January. Italy and Germany saw similar rates of contraction. However, whereas the rate of decline eased to the weakest for almost two years in Italy, it picked up in Germany to the greatest in three months.

Compared to September 2008, like-for-like sales were down in all three countries. However, slower falls in both France and Italy meant that the overall annual rate of contraction for the Eurozone eased to the weakest in five months.

Since the survey started in January 2004, the Retail PMI has been an accurate indicator of year-on-year changes in Eurozone retail sales as measured by Eurostat (at constant prices). As the chart (left) shows, the moderation in the rate of decline in sales indicated by the PMI in recent months has yet to be tracked by the official series.

By sector, only retailers of pharmaceuticals, toiletries and cosmetics reported an improvement in year-on-year sales in September. Even here, the rate of growth was only marginal. Clothing and footwear again posted the sharpest decline, followed by household goods and autos respectively. The latter, having seen a marked easing in the rate of contraction in recent months  -- attributed to the car scrappage incentives - - saw sales fall at a faster rate than in August as these schemes have started to unwind.

Retailers expect improved sales in October. Expectations of retail trade next month compared to planned targets rose sharply and were at their highest in 17 months. The one-month outlook surged in both France and Italy, hitting 19- and 32-month peaks respectively, but remained flat in Germany.

An additional sign of a brighter outlook for Eurozone retailers was provided by the latest employment data. The overall rate of job shedding in the sector eased to the slowest since August 2008, primarily reflecting weaker declines in Italy and France. The latter was notable in seeing the smallest drop in employment since headcounts began falling in June 2008. Retail employment fell at a slightly increased rate in Germany, though it still showed the smallest overall decline of the three countries.

The more positive outlook prompted retailers to reduce the rate at which they cut back on purchases of stock in September. Correspondingly, buying activity fell at the slowest rate for a year in September, and inventories of stock for resale showed the smallest fall for five months.

Prices paid by Eurozone retailers for their stock rose only modestly in September. The rate of purchase price inflation strengthened very slightly for the third month running, having been flat back in June, but remained weak when compared to the survey’s historic trend.

However, divergent patterns were evident across the three monitored countries. Prices fell at a survey-record rate in Germany, contrasting with accelerating inflation in both France and Italy.

Markit says the prices index from the retail PMI survey acts as a reliable leading indicator of consumer price inflation. The latest data signalled that the trend in Eurozone consumer prices has remained broadly flat in September.

Despite a lack of cost pressures, margins at retailers continued to deteriorate at a marked rate across the Eurozone in September. The rate of decline was above the average seen over the survey’s near-six year history, as weak demand limited pricing power. All three countries saw margins fall at faster rates than their long-run averages, with the greatest squeeze posted in Italy.

“PMI” is an acronym for Purchasing Managers’ Index, a type of survey developed originally for tracking business conditions in the manufacturing sector. With such surveys now undertaken in service sectors, construction industry and retail, the acronym has become a generic term to describe the methodology used by Markit Economics for these surveys.

Markit Economics says it currently conducts PMI surveys for 26 countries and key regions including the Eurozone and BRIC. The PMIs have become the most closely watched business surveys in the world, favoured by central banks, financial markets and business decision makers for their ability to provide up-to-date, accurate and often unique monthly indicators of economic trends. The success of the PMI surveys lies in their ability to provide a rapid and reliable guide to what is really happening in the economy from month-to-month.

For the Retail PMI, Markit Economics says it has recruited a representative panel of retail companies in France, Germany and Italy. Together, these three countries account for approximately 62% of total Eurozone retail sales by value. The panel includes large chain retailers as well as smaller retailers to ensure balanced representation of the true structure of the Eurozone retail sector. Similarly, the composition of the panel by classification of retailer (i.e. type of good sold) is monitored to ensure accurate representation. Markit Economics ensures the correct structure remains in place over time and that response rates remain sufficiently high to generate reliable economic data.

Related Articles


© Copyright 2007 by Finfacts.com

Top of Page

EU Economy
Latest Headlines
Draghi says economic outlook has improved but subject to downside risks
Greek leaders agree new austerity measures to pave way for second bailout
ECB keeps benchmark interest rate of 1.0%; Bank of England keeps rate unchanged and adds £50bn to bond-buying program
German exports fell in December; Exports rose 11.4% in 2011 to €1.06trn
Greece’s debt rose to 159.1% of GDP in Q3 of 2011 from 138.8% year earlier; Ireland's rose from 88.4% to 104.9%
Eurozone service sector stabilises in January as growth in France and Germany offsets declines in Spain and Italy
Spain's Insider-Outsider Divide: Young temporary workers overwhelmingly the victims of brutal recession
Eurozone annual inflation is expected to be 2.7% in January 2012
Eurozone Bank Lending Survey shows falling loan demand in Ireland and rest of Eurozone in Q4 2011
Eurozone manufacturing downturn eases in January as Germany returns to growth
Eurozone unemployment rate stable at 10.4% in December; Irish jobless rate at 14.5%; Spain at 22.9% and Austria at 4.1%
German retail sales fell in December but rose in 2011; Number of unemployed fell 420,000 in 2011
Japan's manufacturing began 2012 in growth mode; Data also shows output jumped in December on recovery from Thai flooding disruptions
Summit of EU leaders underway in Brussels; France cuts 2012 GDP forecast to 0.5%; Italy raises €7.5bn at reduced rates
Optimism among German consumers increased at the beginning of 2012
Merkel tells Davos elite reforms cannot be ignored; Unused EU funds could support SMEs, entrepreneurs and R&D investments
German business confidence jumped to a five-month high in January
Eurozone's manufacturing and services sectors recovered in January; Output rose strongly in Germany
Bank of Spain forecasts economy will contract -1.5% in 2012; Bank of France governor says France's economy will accelerate in the spring
IMF chief Lagarde says Eurozone needs bigger firewall to prevent Italy and Spain sliding towards default
Juncker says Eurozone must find ways to boost economic growth while cutting public budgets
IMF needs to raise $300bn in additional lending resources; Germany and Portugal hold successful bond auctions
Germany cuts its 2012 GDP forecast to 0.7%; "Germany is and remains an anchor for stability and growth in Europe"
European borrowing costs dropped Tuesday: European Commission begins legal action against Hungary
Eurozone annual inflation was 2.7% in December 2011 down from 3.0% in November
German economic sentiment increased in January
Firms up to 5 years old responsible for most job creation in Europe
Italy, Spain, Greece have had trade deficits with Germany since at least 1980 -- 20 years before euro launch
Draghi says signs the economy is stabilising; Strong market interest for Italian and Spanish bonds
Industrial production down by 0.1% in November in both Eurozone and EU27; 12-month production also down
Merkel has "great respect" for recent Italian economic reforms; Germany may provide more cash for rescue fund
Fitch Ratings says Italy is biggest threat to euro
German exports rose in month of November 2011 while imports fell; Almost 50% of exports were ex-EU27
Eurozone Business Climate Indicator improved in December; Economic Sentiment Index of business/ consumer confidence fell to a 2-year low
Eurozone unemployment at 10.3% in November - - 45,000 job losses in month; Austria at 4%; Ireland at 15% and Spain at 23%
Eurozone sales volume down 0.8% in November 2011
Eurozone industrial orders rose in October less than expected after sharp plunge in September
Eurozone annual inflation expected to be 2.8% in December 2011 down from 3.0% in November
Eurozone services activity falls in December led by downturns in Italy and Spain; Germany and France rise
Manufacturing activity in the Eurozone fell for a fifth straight month in December