German industry registers more orders – despite the looming recession

Industry

Open orders from Germany increased in July by 0.3 percent compared to the previous month, those from abroad by 0.8 percent.

(Photo: imago images/Rupert Oberhäuser)

Berlin Despite the looming recession, the order books of German industrial companies are fuller than ever. The number of orders in July grew by 0.7 percent compared to the previous month, as the Federal Statistical Office announced on Monday.

Compared to the same month last year, there was an increase of 12.6 percent. “This means that the order backlog in the manufacturing industry has reached a new high since records began in 2015,” as the statisticians emphasized, who also added a reason for the backlog of orders: “In addition to high energy costs for industrial companies, the continuing shortage of primary products is also a factor as before, there were problems when processing the orders,” it said.

Open orders from Germany increased in July by 0.3 percent compared to the previous month, those from abroad by 0.8 percent. Orders piled up, especially among manufacturers of capital goods such as machines, systems and vehicles: there was an increase of 0.7 percent. However, the industry should not rely on its fat order books: economists warn that in a recession looming due to the energy crisis, orders that have already been placed could also be canceled again.

According to the information, the order backlog stagnated at 8.0 months. This indicates how many months the companies would theoretically have to produce with unchanged sales without new incoming orders in order to process the existing orders. For manufacturers of capital goods, the range is above average at 11.9 months.

Top jobs of the day

Find the best jobs now and
be notified by email.

According to a survey by the Ifo Institute, complaints in the industry about a lack of preliminary products and materials have recently decreased noticeably: In August, 62 percent of the companies reported bottlenecks, in July it was still more than 73 percent. This suggests that orders can now be served a little faster since the beginning.

More: What speaks for a wave of insolvencies – and what does not

source site-12