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German industrial output fall points to weak quarter, economists say

By Thomson Reuters Apr 9, 2026 | 1:08 AM

By Maria Martinez

BERLIN, April 9 (Reuters) – German industrial production fell unexpectedly in February, with economists saying the weakness pointed to disappointing first quarter for Europe’s biggest economy, despite exports rising by more than expected on stronger European ​demand.

Industrial production decreased by 0.3% compared with the previous month, Germany’s federal ‌statistics office said on Thursday. Analysts polled by Reuters had predicted a 0.7% rise.

“Data released today underline that Germany’s manufacturing sector was subdued even before the Iran conflict,” said Andrew Kennigham, chief Europe economist at Capital Economics.

Kennigham expects the sector to remain weak this year, although it is not likely ‌to ​suffer anything like the big declines seen during the ⁠last energy crisis that began ⁠in 2022.

The less volatile three-month on three-month comparison showed that production was 0.4% lower in the period from December to February than in the previous three months.

ON TRACK FOR CONTRACTION EVEN WITHOUT WAR

February’s data shows that even without the Ian ​war, the German economy was on track for yet another quarter of contraction, said Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro at ING.

“As much as we were hoping to ⁠finally comment on some good economic news from ⁠Germany, it is a bit like waiting for a German train ​these days: definitely delayed and uncertain whether it will ever arrive,” Brzeski said.

Orders rose 0.9% on ​a seasonally and calendar-adjusted basis, official data showed on Wednesday.

Recent trends ‌in new factory orders offer little hope that the economy will soon receive significant additional momentum from the industrial sector, said Ralph Solveen, senior economist at Commerzbank, forecasting the overall economy is likely to have grown only marginally in the first quarter.

EXPORTS ON THE RISE

German ⁠exports rose by 3.6% compared with the previous month, data from the federal statistics office showed, posting the biggest increase since May 2022. This compared with a forecast for a ⁠1% increase in a Reuters ‌poll.

Imports rose by 4.7% on the month on a calendar and ⁠seasonally adjusted basis.

As a result, Germany’s foreign trade balance narrowed ​to ‌a surplus of 19.8 billion euros ($23.09 billion) in February, from ​a surplus of ⁠20.3 billion euros in January.

Exports to European Union countries rose by 5.8% on the month and exports to countries outside the EU increased by 0.8%.

With the tariffs imposed by the U.S., exports to Germany’s main export destination fell by 7.5% on the month.

($1 = 0.8576 euros)

(Additional reporting by Cian Muenster, Emanuele Berro and Bernadette Hogg. Editing by Miranda Murray, Linda ​Pasquini and Alexander Smith)