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Thursday, January 31, 2008

Estonia Retail Sales and Industrial Output December 2007

Growth in Estonian retail sales and industrial production weakened in December, offering the latest signs that the economy is now cooling significantly and rapidly.

According to Statistics Estonia, in December 2007 retail sales for retail trade enterprises amounted to 5.4 billion kroons, which is 630 million kroons up on December 2006, in money but not real terms (inflation remember). Retail sales growth eased to an annual rate of 4 percent, the slowest since at least 2001, and industrial output declined 2.1 percent on an annual basis, the first contraction in more than five years, the Tallinin-based statistics office said today.

Retail sales slowed from a 6 percent growth rate in November, mostly as a result of consumers having less available to spend due to the ongoing increase in food prices, the statistics office said. Retail sales grew 14 percent on average in 2007, it added.




Consumer confidence fell in January to its lowest level in almost three years on worsening expectations for public and personal finances. The number of property transactions also fell in the fourth quarter to the lowest level in almost three years, as interest rates keep rising and banks have restricted lending terms.




Industrial Output

According to preliminary data from Statistics Estonia, industrial production in 2007 increased by 6% compared to 2006. Rapid growth in energy production and mining were the main factors producing growth in total industrial output. Growth in the manufacturing component first slowed and then turned negative towards the end of the year.

In December 2007, Estonia's seasonally adjusted industrial production fell 7.3 % compared with November. As compared with the month of December 2006, total industrial production fell 2%, and in manufacturing 5.7%.

This contraction in industrial output, adjusted for working days, followed a revised 4.5 percent expansion in November, the statistics office said. Manufacturing, which is the main contributor to gross domestic product growth at this point, shrank by 5.7 percent, the weakest showing since May 1999, led by a contraction in furniture, wood and construction materials' output. This is not good news for Q4 GDP, and when coupled with the steady downward movement in year on year retail sales begin to raise serious questions about what Q1 2008 GDP may actually look like.

Industrial output growth was hampered last year by rising costs as companies faced increasing labor shortages, unemployment was at a 16-year low and domestic demand started to cool after a three-year growth spurt.



Looking at the retail sales and industrial output charts, all I would say is that if this is marking the line of a "soft landing", then I would hate to see what a hard one looked like. Really, perhaps the most preoccupying part about all this looking through the comments you see in the press is just how little idea most of the professionally paid analysts have of what is actually going on here.

Domestic demand is going the same way as Hungary, and short of a major adjustment in relative prices (which means basically a big downward revision in currency values) exports will obviously not be able to drive growth. In other words if the currency value problem is not - for one reason or another - not addressed then you are going to see some of the most severe wage deflation in any developed country in recent times to put exports back onto a cometitive footing. Which means very weak domestic demand over a period of years while everything corrects, meaning very low GDP growth numbers, and these, remember are the key years before post 2012 the ageing population problem really starts to lock-in. It is the lack of urgency and shoulder shrugging you find almost everywhere that continues to preoccupy. Clearly most people are well out of their depth with all this, but does anyone really realise that the whole future of Estonia as a nation is now in play?

Monday, January 28, 2008

Lithuania GDP Q4 2007

Lithuania's economy grew at the slowest pace in a year in the fourth quarter as accelerating inflation and tightening bank lending squeezed consumer spending. Growth slowed to an annual 7.9 percent from 10.8 percent in the third quarter, according to a flash estimate from the Vilnius-based statistics office today.



The statistics office also estimated full-year growth in 2007 at 8.7 percent, as compared with 7.7 percent in 2006. a number of indicators now suggest that growth is slowing steadily. The pace of retail sales growth in the last quarter of 2007 was the slowest in almost three years as inflation accelerated to 8.1 percent in December.

Estonia Consumer Confidence January 2007

Unfortunately the news is hardly surprising, but Estonian consumer confidence fell in January to its lowest level in almost three years on worsening expectations about public and personal finances according to the consumer confidence index published by the Tallinn-based Institute of Economic Research today. The index fell to minus 11 this month from minus 10 in December. In January 2007, the index was at 13.



Consumer spending weakened natably at the end of last year from record level earlier in the year under pressure from rising prices, rising interest rates and stricter bank lending conditions. Economic growth in the third quarter slowed to a four-year low of 6.4 percent. Rising inflation accompanied by slowing wage increases have also served to worsen consumer's expectations.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Estonia Trade Deficit November 2007

The Estonian Statistics Office have published the Estonian trade data for November. According to the preliminary data, in November 2007 the Estonian foreign trade deficit was 3.6 billion kroons and was down both when compared to November 2006 as well as to October 2007. Compared to November 2006, foreign trade turnover increased by 6%, but decreased by 2% compared to October 2007.

In November 2007 the exports were 11.7 billion kroons (43%) and imports 15.3 billion kroons (57%). Compared to November 2006, the exports of goods increased 12% while the imports of goods was up 2%.

In November 2007 the trade deficit was 3.6 billion kroons November 2006 it was 4.5 billion kroons and in October 2007 — 3.9 billion kroons.

If we look at the chart for the monthly trade deficit, we will see that it has imporved somewhat, but if we look at the monthly imports and exports chart (second chart below) we will see that while there was some rebound in exports towards the end of 2007, a significant part of the improvement in the trade deficit comes from a weakening in imports, a phenomenon which is, to some extent, associated with the downturn in domestic demand.