Resume af teksten:
Italiens økonomi startede året stærkt, men juni’s data indikerer en aftagende økonomisk vækst. Forbrugertilliden faldt delvist i juni, med en mere pessimistisk holdning til den generelle økonomi og privatøkonomien. Der er stabile forventninger til fremtidig arbejdsløshed, men en øget intention om at spare og et fald i planlagte køb af holdbare forbrugsgoder. Detailhandelens tillid er steget, muligvis på grund af et skift til ikke-holdbare varer. Produktionen i fremstillingssektoren er stabil med en lille forbedring i forventet produktion, mens tilliden i byggeriet er drevet af specialiserede værker og civilingeniørprojekter. Servicesektorens tillid er steget lidt, primært på grund af en opsving i turismen, men sektoren har underpræsteret i andet kvartal. Italiens BNP-vækst i andet kvartal forventes at være aftaget fra første kvartal, med en mulig genopretning i anden halvdel af året, hvis oliepriserne stabiliseres. Forventningen til BNP-væksten i 2026 er revideret op til 0,8%.
Fra ING:
The Italian economy started the year relatively strongly, but April and May confidence data pointed to a slowdown, albeit still in positive territory. June’s reading, released today, appears to confirm this trend. Notably, most June data were collected before the US-Iran Memorandum of Understanding, meaning its full impact on confidence is likely to show up in July.
Private consumption had been the main positive surprise in the first quarter GDP release, and subsequently the most vulnerable component to the side effects of the war in the Middle East on energy prices and via headline inflation.
After catching up some ground in May, consumer confidence partially backed down in June. Consumers are proving more downbeat about the general economic situation and their household balance sheet. Expectations about future unemployment are stable, but this cannot prevent a more prudent attitude, as higher intentions to save match with sharply declining intentions to purchase durable goods. The concurrent increase in confidence among retail businesses might suggest a temporary shift towards non-durables consumption.
Manufacturers were relatively resilient to disruptions related to the war in the Middle East in April and May. June data points to stable production levels and a marginal improvement in expected production, likely to relate to declining stocks of finished products rather than to orders, whose indicator marginally edged down.
The relative resilience in manufacturing goods suggests that this sector might resume its gradual recovery path if US-Iran negotiations progress well and energy prices converge towards pre-war levels, helping contain the cost base.
The improvement in confidence in the construction sector is driven by specialised works and civil engineering, the latter being likely helped by the imminent deadline for many investments foreseen by the EU-funded recovery plan. On the residential front, the situation seems to be stabilising, as the distorting effect of the very generous “Superbonus” tax incentive finally fades away.
In April and May, confidence in the service sector had unsurprisingly recorded two sharp falls, highlighting the vulnerability of the sector, and particularly of the tourism component (just think of gasoline and jet fuel prices) to the Middle East war. The small recovery of services confidence in June, mostly backed by a sharp rebound in the tourism component, provides only limited comfort. Over the second quarter, the service sector has likely been an underperformer.
All in all, it is reasonable to assume that second quarter Italian GDP growth should have marked a clear deceleration from the first quarter, possibly avoiding the contraction territory. At the heart of it should be a temporary slowdown in private consumption. If the normalisation of oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz proceeds without bumps and energy inflation decelerates, a gradual recovery over the second half of the year could materialise.
On the back of a strong start to the year and of the new reduced inflation profile, we have slightly upgraded our forecast for average 2026 GDP growth to 0.8%.
Kilde: ING, https://think.ing.com/snaps/italian-confidence-data-send-mixed-signals-in-june/
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