• German recovery confirmed „ 
  • The US stumbles, no harm done…
As the new year gets underway, statistics on both sides of the Atlantic are open to interpretation, with both optimists and pessimists finding arguments to support their positions. One thing is unmistakeable: investors have clearly chosen sides. In the United States, Q4 GDP remained virtually flat, contracting only 0.1% (q/q, annualised rate), largely due to the drop off in public spending. For some, this contraction foreshadows what risks happening after 1 March... Despite the doomsayers, the markets have not bought into this scenario. They see the glass half full. Excluding public spending, GDP grew 1.4%, signalling the dynamic momentum of the US private sector. In the eurozone, the good news comes from Germany. Although the preliminary Q4 2012 estimates of national GDP do not augur well for the eurozone as a whole, Germany is showing tangible signs of recovering, as confirmed by the PMI composite index for January. A stronger, better balanced recovery of the German economy would benefit the monetary union as a whole, particularly the peripheral countries, which have made major competitiveness gains in recent months.