German Consumers Start to Shiver Amid Eurozone Chill

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German consumers are beginning to feel the pinch, a poll showed on Tuesday, the second danger sign for Europe's top economy in two days after a surprise monthly slump in business confidence.

Consumer confidence in Germany is stagnating, market research company GfK said, hard on the heels of data showing the eurozone crisis had pushed down business confidence, sparking recession alarm bells to ring.

While the eurozone debt crisis has brought Greece to its knees and caused Spain, its fourth-largest economy, to wobble, Germany has until recently weathered the turbulence relatively unscathed.

But consumers in Europe's powerhouse appeared cautious.

GfK said in a statement that its household confidence index was forecast to remain at 5.9 points in October, the same level as the reading in September.

While consumers' willingness to spend and their assessment of the economic situation had improved, they expected their own personal income situation to worsen over the coming months, the GfK said.

The headline consumer confidence reading is based on responses from about 2,000 households on their expectations about pay and the economy as a whole in the coming months, as well as their willingness to spend money.

On Monday, economists warned that Germany was headed for recession after the eurozone crisis pushed down business confidence in the country to the lowest level since February 2010.

The Ifo institute said its closely watched survey of the business climate in Germany dropped unexpectedly in September for the fifth month running to 101.4 points from 102.3 points in August.

Jennifer McKeown, an analyst at Capital Economics, said the data was a reminder that even the eurozone's strongest economies were suffering which could in turn hit their ability to help weaker neighbours.

"In all ... it seems like only a matter of time before the economy starts to contract. This will make support for the peripheral economies even more difficult to muster," she added.

Germany has relied on its powerful export motor to keep the economy humming through the near three-year crisis in the 17-country bloc, notching up modest growth of 0.3 percent in the second quarter while the eurozone as a whole contracted by 0.2 percent.

But new car registrations, a key indicator of demand in Germany, tumbled sharply in August, retail sales figures also declined and unemployment is starting to rise.