Reality check for Europe

Sun Feb 10, 2008 10:05am EST
 

By Mike Dolan

LONDON, Feb 10 - (Reuters) - The extent of Europe's infection from the U.S. subprime mortgage virus is becoming clearer, even as the European Central Bank faces down calls for it to follow U.S. and UK counterparts by cutting interest rates.

Early estimates of fourth-quarter national output from the big euro zone economies are due later this week. The picture is probably one of growth in the 15-nation currency area marginally outstripping the U.S. economy in the final quarter of last year.

But there are growing signs the credit crisis and looming U.S. recession have hit Europe deeper than policymakers seem willing to acknowledge. Hopes that the euro zone can remain partly insulated from a U.S. housing bust and recession are receding.

Cisco Systems (CSCO.O: Quote), the largest maker of the routers and switches that direct traffic on data networks, warned last week of a rapid slowdown in both U.S. and European orders.

Significantly, the Cisco numbers suggested conditions were deteriorating faster in Europe than the United States. In the quarter through January order growth in Europe more than halved to 8 percent. U.S. order growth slipped only one percentage point to 12 percent.

"It's the most cautious I've seen CEOs in the U.S. and Europe in many years," Cisco Chief Executive John Chambers said.

That tallied with last week's shock service sector surveys. Any suggestion that Europe was weathering a U.S.-focused downturn seemed wide of the mark.

While attention largely centered on a plunge in confidence among U.S. service firms in January, German, Spanish and Italian service sectors also recorded their first contraction in years.  Continued...