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The Conference Board Leading Economic Index for the Euro Area Shows Continuing Contraction
added: 2009-01-28

The Conference Board Leading Economic Index (LEI) for the Euro Area declined a further 0.9 percent in December to 93.3 (2004 = 100), following a 1.7 percent fall in November and a 2.5 percent drop in October. Falling economic sentiment and stock prices more than offset large positive contributions from inflation-adjusted money supply and the interest rate spread.

The Euro Area LEI, published for the first time, has been declining since June 2007, falling by more than 14.0 percent since then, and the rate of this decline has accelerated in recent months. A previous decline of this magnitude preceded the region's 1992-93 recession. Meanwhile, The Conference Board Coincident Economic Index (CEI) for the Euro Area, a measure of current economic activity, was unchanged in December after falling 0.3 percent in October to 105.1 in November (2004 = 100).

"The Conference Board Leading Economic Index for the Euro Area indicates that there is no improvement in sight," said Jean-Claude Manini, The Conference Board's Senior Economist for Europe. "The effects of an expansionary policy mix may kick in later this year, and lead to some recovery in output, but employment growth will remain sluggish. While the worst of the downturn may be behind us, the recession will likely deepen through at least the first half of 2009."

The Conference Board Euro Area LEI aggregates eight economic indicators that measure activity in the Euro Area as a whole (rather than indicators of individual member countries), each of which has proven accurate on its own. Aggregating individual indicators into a composite index filters out so-called "noise" to show underlying trends more clearly.


Source: The Conference Board

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