Europe Has No Control Over Its Future. Period.
Economics / European Union Jan 30, 2019 - 05:49 PM GMTBy: John_Mauldin
Whenever we talk about the European economy, Germany drives  the discussion.
  Yes, the UK and France are big, but Germany is the giant.  If Germany sneezes, the rest of the continent catches cold.  
  And it is sneezing hard right now.
Germany’s Economic Woes
The latest GDP forecasts peg German growth at 1.5% for  2019. That is way too optimistic.
  Germany had a 0.2% contraction in Q3 2018—and only 0.5%  growth the quarter before. Fundamentals worsened, too.
  Industrial orders for exports dropped 3.2% in November.  This is the lifeblood of Eurozone. Germany’s exports are what keep the European  economy alive.
  Exports are slowing due to the same cyclical factors that  hit US growth. Like the US, Germany had a good run since the last crisis. At  some point, it must end.
  But some of this is uniquely German, too.
  The euro currency gave Germany an upper hand over the  zone’s smaller players who bought German exports with German loans.
  We saw how that worked with Greece. Now a similar  scenario is unfolding in much-larger Italy.
  With all this going on, the European Central Bank wants to  end its asset purchases in the coming year.  And yet it keeps interest  rates negative.
  That is a formula for a wildly distorted economy, at best…
Growing Political Tensions
Meanwhile, “yellow vest” protests in France reveal growing  working-class unrest.
  Imagine what will happen if (when) the EU economy dives  into a recession. Unemployment will rise, governments’ safety nets will vanish.  The population won’t afford higher taxes.
  It could get ugly and not just in France. Remember, many EU  countries are parliamentary systems whose governments can fall anytime.
  I admit, this is a gloomy outlook. Maybe it’s wrong.
In a Helpless Position
Gavekal Research’s Nick Andrews recently looked at  these same issues and asked what could change Europe’s trajectory.
  With monetary and fiscal  policy constrained, and with domestic consumer demand weakening, any such  driver—for the economy or equities—is only likely to be external. There are  several possible candidates: 
  1. A favorable Brexit deal.  Since the UK’s 2016 referendum, eurozone shipments to the single currency  bloc’s second-biggest export market have stagnated. If the clouds clear in the  coming months, with a no-deal Brexit avoided, then risk premiums will diminish,  sterling will rally and eurozone exports to the UK are likely to pick up. For  now, however, the outlook on this front remains highly uncertain. 
  2. Improved US-China trade  relations. A deal to avert tariff increases would remove one major uncertainty  hanging over the global economy. Again, risk premiums would fall. 
  3. A stabilization or  acceleration in Chinese growth, whether as a result of a trade deal or a  domestic stimulus program. A pick-up in Chinese domestic consumer demand would  benefit European companies exposed to Asia, notably luxury goods stocks.  However, there is little probability of a stimulus effort on the scale of  2009’s, so the effect on Europe’s economy and markets of Chinese policy easing  is likely to be muted. 
  In short, there is little  prospect of a new domestic driver of European growth emerging, and the external  situation remains highly uncertain. In the absence of any clear new growth  engine, the composite eurozone PMI released in the first week of January  indicates that a slowdown of year-on-year GDP growth to around 1% from the  ECB’s estimate of 1.9% for 2018 is possible. 
  Nick’s implication is disturbing. Europe is helpless. It will  continue circling the drain unless external events go its way.
  In other words, Europe has no control over its future. That  is not a comfortable position to be in.
  If eurozone growth ends at 1% in 2018, it’s a good bet 2019  will be no better. It could possibly bring a true recession.
  What happens to German banks in that scenario? And if they  go wobbly, what happens to US, Canadian, and Asian banks?
Something Wicked Is Coming
If Europe goes into recession, it will have a profound  impact on the world and the US. For those reasons, paying attention to Europe  is critical in 2019.
  Something wicked is coming. And we may see  far more yellow vests or their equivalent all over the world before this is  over.
  I see significant potential for global recession that will  bleed over into the US market. A few unforced errors from the Fed or US  government could speed up the process.
  Economics is about to get interesting.
Join hundreds of thousands of other readers of Thoughts from the Frontline
Sharp macroeconomic analysis, big market calls, and shrewd predictions are all in a week’s work for visionary thinker and acclaimed financial expert John Mauldin. Since 2001, investors have turned to his Thoughts from the Frontline to be informed about what’s really going on in the economy. Join hundreds of thousands of readers, and get it free in your inbox every week.
|  John Mauldin Archive | 
© 2005-2022 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.
	

 
  
 
	