In November, German industry suffered the sharpest slump in orders for more than a year due to the weakening global economy.

The orders were 5.3 percent lower than in the previous month, as the Federal Statistical Office announced on Friday.

A lack of major orders contributed to this.

Economists surveyed by the Reuters news agency had only expected a decline of 0.5 percent, after growth of 0.6 percent in October.

Compared to November 2021, the calendar-adjusted level was 11.0 percent lower.

"Incoming orders have thus reached their lowest level since July 2020," according to the statistics office.

The development shows "that the industry is going through a difficult winter, even if the business expectations of the companies have recently improved," commented the Federal Ministry of Economics on the development.

"However, the order backlog in industry is still high, which is currently supporting production." In the short term, there is good news, said the chief economist at VP Bank, Thomas Gitzel: "The declining order intake is not an acute threat to the German economy".

Due to the high order backlog in large parts of the industry, production is secured for the current year, since uncompleted orders have been building up due to material shortages.

"The declining incoming orders will only cause real difficulties at the end of the year or at the beginning of 2024," said Gitzel.

"But then probably all the more clearly."

Falling bottlenecks give hope

Domestic orders in November fell by a comparatively small 1.1 percent compared to the previous month, while those from abroad fell by 8.1 percent.

While demand from the euro zone fell by 10.3 percent, new business with the rest of the world fell by 6.8 percent.

Orders for capital goods such as machines, vehicles and systems fell by 8.5 percent this time.

The manufacturers of intermediate goods saw a decline of 0.9 percent.

Orders for consumer goods fell by 0.7 percent.

The sluggish global economy, lack of materials and the energy crisis are currently affecting the industry.

However, complaints in the industry about missing materials decreased in December for the third month in a row - and significantly so: 50.7 percent of companies were still suffering from this, after 59.3 percent in November, as the Munich Ifo Institute found out.

"A dissolution of the bottlenecks now seems to be emerging in many sectors," said the head of the Ifo surveys, Klaus Wohlrabe.

"This will support the economy in the coming months."

Record sales in retail

Trading, on the other hand, is sending positive signals.

In Germany, retailers achieved record sales last year thanks to price increases.

Nominally, the revenues were 8.2 percent above the previous record year 2021, as the Federal Statistical Office announced on Friday based on an estimate based on the data up to and including November 2022.

In real terms, i.e. adjusted for price increases, sales in the industry were 0.3 percent lower than a year earlier.

Sharp increases in energy and food prices have been weighing on private consumption for months.

The Christmas business that started in November brought a bit of a boost: According to preliminary results, retail companies in Germany generated calendar and seasonally adjusted real and nominal 1.3 percent more sales than in October 2022 in that month. Compared to the same month last year, sales fell in the November rose by 5.9 percent in real terms, but rose by 4.8 percent in nominal terms.

The Wiesbaden statisticians explain the difference between these two values ​​with high price increases.