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Cablegate: German Economy Holds Its Breath for Financial Crisis To

Published: Fri 4 Apr 2008 09:07 AM
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TAGS: EFIN ECON EU GM
SUBJECT: German Economy Holds its Breath for Financial Crisis to
Pass
ENTIRE TEXT IS SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED. NOT FOR INTERNET
DISTRIBUTION
1. SUMMARY. The international financial crisis has so far had a
limited impact in Germany and many analysts contend the EU and
emerging markets will pick up most of the slack from lower exports
to the U.S. The soaring euro and a continuing stream of write-downs
by German banks have shaken confidence in some quarters, resulting
in a sustained reluctance by banks to lend to one another. Our
interlocutors were reasonably confident Germany would weather the
storm, but most acknowledged that continued uncertainty in the
markets made it difficult to look beyond the next several months.
END SUMMARY.
2. In a series of meetings in Frankfurt and Wiesbaden on March
27-28, EMIN, Congen Econoff, and FSNs met with senior economists and
officials at Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, the European Central Bank
(ECB), and the German Council of Economic Experts. Discussions
ranged from recent actions by central banks to the health of the
German economy.
DECOUPLING: NOT IF, BUT HOW MUCH
--------------------------------
3. The theory that Germany's investment in and trade with new
markets has reduced its once great reliance on exports to the U.S.
has gained prominence in Germany and is commonly referred to as
"decoupling." Nonetheless, a senior economist at Deutsche Bank
argued that, with the U.S. economy representing one quarter of world
GDP, a slowdown was certain to have an effect on Germany, the
world's largest exporter. Although the Bundesbank recently
indicated that German exports remained strong and would continue to
do so, he argued that exports both to the U.S. and dollar-linked
economies in the developing world would naturally decline by the end
of the year, with a knock-on impact on overall growth. The
favorable news on current exports would disappear once the impact of
the strong euro and the global slowdown appeared.
4. On the other hand, Goldman Sachs's chief economist argued that
decoupling was here to stay. Germany's exports to the developing
world, especially to Brazil, Russia, India and China (the so-called
BRIC countries), are expanding rapidly, while those to the U.S.
represent a diminishing share of total trade. Trade figures
published by the German statistical office seem to prove the point:
From 2006 to 2007, German trade with the BRIC countries increased
15% from 63.1 billion euros ($99 billion) to 72.3 billion euros
($114 billion), now almost on a par with the 73.4 billion euros
($116 billion) of goods exported to the U.S., down from 77.9 billion
euros ($123 billion) in 2006.
5. Economists at the German Council of Economic Experts, a
prominent advisory body to the German government, agreed that the
economy looked strong for 2008. High-quality German industrial
products, from machine tools to electronics, continue to be in high
demand worldwide. Competing on quality and reliability, rather than
price alone, German sales are only marginally affected by the strong
euro which may even help German firms gain a competitive edge on
price-sensitive European competitors. They also expect the effect
of the subprime crisis on Germany to be limited since German
enterprises traditionally rely heavily on their own capital
resources and are therefore not as dependent on external credit. In
addition, they said the slowdown in the U.S. economy was
sector-based focusing on areas such as construction that do not rely
heavily on imports.
BANKING SECTOR: NERVOUS WAIT FOR NORMALITY TO RESUME
--------------------------------------------- -------
6. European Central Bank (ECB) officials confirmed that interbank
lending remained abnormal in Germany and Europe, with three-month
rates still far above the official ECB rate. The ECB on March 25
allotted an extra 50 billion euros ($77.1 billion) in short-term
credit as part of its weekly refinancing operation. The bank
announced March 28 it would provide 150 billion euros ($237 billion)
in additional liquidity, which would include its first ever
six-month refinancing operations, with three transactions at 25
billion euros ($40 billion dollars) starting April 3.
7. Officials at the ECB argued that recent operations were driven
primarily by banks' need for liquidity at the end of the reporting
cycle, and reflect somewhat normal circumstances. Private bank
economists said that Spanish banks were large demanders of ECB
credit. ECB officials said that their acceptance of a wide range of
collateral and a large set of counterparts in monetary operations,
two practices that the U.S. Federal Reserve is reportedly now moving
closer toward, have been keys to the successful response to the lack
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of liquidity.
8. The officials emphasized the difference in conditions in the
U.S. and European financial markets in the current crisis saying of
the U.S. "Who knows what we would have done?" and drawing a clear
line between the interest rate policies of the Federal Reserve and
the ECB. Apart from the obvious difference in mandate, with the ECB
primarily committed to price stability, officialssaid that they saw
a different economic environmnt in Europe, with euro-zone inflation
at a recod high of 3.3% in February and oil prices and demad both
strong. For Germany, the ECB expects excetional wage growth in
2008 despite increased dowward risks. When coupled with rising
inflation,the ECB has little choice but to keep interest rats up.
The Deutsche Bank economist even worried aout possible
"stagflation" -- stagnation in Europan economies and rampant
inflation in the develoing world -- and said that the key was for
the EB to hold firm on interest rates.
9. The healt of the German banking sector was again questioned
this week as greater than expected write-downs emrged from state
banks BayernLB and WestLB (4.3 bllion euros or $6.7 billion, and
1.6 billion eurs or $2.5 billion respectively). Moreover, Deutsce
Bank stepped back this week from profit target of only a month ago
and reported expected write-owns in its leverage loan portfolio of
2.5 billin euros ($4.0 billion) in the first quarter of 200. The
Deutsche Bank economist said his bank hadadjusted too slowly to new
circumstances and, lie others, had not generated a new business
model nd now faced a deteriorating revenue stream. On te
accounting side, he said the "mark to market" system has not worked
well in a dysfunctional market where current prices do not reflect
the true value of assets, and write-downs have a multiplier effect
as banks unravel holdings. Several experts wondered when cash-rich
sovereign wealth funds would step in to buy up undervalued assets,
seeing such a development as only a matter of time. The Goldman
Sachs economist predicted that German banks would leave capital
markets and return to their core business: private lending.
10. A number of interlocutors speculated on the need for new
regulation. ECB officials echoed ECB President Jean Claude
Trichet's testimony before the European Parliament on March 26 in
which he pointed to the need for new regulation to be anti-cyclical.
Present rules, they claim, have exacerbated problems rather than
prevent them. Rules kicked in when it was too late and are partly
to blame for the downward spiral experienced in financial markets.
One economist proposed that asset values should be included in the
calculation of interest rates by central banks to prevent bubbles
resulting from artificially low rates. Private bank economists
agreed that new rules on liquidity requirements for the financial
sector were necessary.
11. COMMENT. While projections for 2008 point to continued growth
of the German economy, all forecasters have revised their
expectations downward, lower than the government's prediction of
just below 2%. Despite strong fundamentals, downward risks loom: a
strong euro, above-target inflation, and demand for large wage
increases. While central bankers deserve credit for maintaining
macroeconomic stability to date, financial markets remain unsteady.
"This is not a textbook situation," the ECB's chief economist said
in describing the current state of affairs. END COMMENT.
13. This cable was coordinated with Embassy Berlin.
POWELL
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