Germany’s Bundesbank reports first loss since 1979; economy contracts
As of the end of 2024, Bundesbank’s total gold and currency reserves stood at approximately €267 billion.
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In this April 9, 2018, file photo the bank's logo is seen at a building of Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt, Germany. (AP)
The German Federal Bank (Bundesbank) has posted its first loss since 1979, marking a historic financial downturn for the institution, the regulator announced.
The total losses amounted to €19.2 billion, making it the largest deficit since the bank’s founding in 1957. Looking ahead, Bundesbank anticipates further losses in the coming years, though at a reduced scale.
“The institution has passed through its toughest times,” Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel stated. He had previously warned that the central bank is unlikely to generate profits for an extended period.
As of the end of 2024, Bundesbank’s total gold and currency reserves stood at approximately €267 billion.
Germany's economic contraction poses challenge for next government
Germany's statistics agency confirmed Tuesday that the country's economy contracted in the final quarter of 2024, underlining the scale of the challenge for the next German government to turn around its economic fortunes, The Wall Street Journal reported
Europe’s largest economy shrank 0.2% in the three months to the end of December, matching a prior estimate published in January, the agency Destatis said. The country’s economy contracted for a second year in a row in 2024, also by 0.2%.
Germany’s opposition leader Friedrich Merz won a comfortable victory in Sunday’s election but will need a coalition partner to govern. However, populist parties of the far-left and far-right won enough seats to halt reforms to public borrowing, which could limit much-needed investment in the economy or hold up funds for defense.
The incumbent coalition government last month forecasted just 0.3% economic growth in 2025, slashing prior forecasts. A further headache ahead could come from tariffs threatened by US President Trump, which might disproportionately hit Germany’s export-driven economy.
Germany's faces longest post-war recession, report finds
The German economy has been heading toward its most prolonged recession since World War II, with three consecutive years of contraction anticipated by 2025, according to a report by the Handelsblatt Research Institute (HRI) published last month.
The institute projects a 0.1% economic decline in 2025, following contractions of 0.3% in 2023 and 0.2% in 2024. This surpasses the two-year downturn experienced in the early 2000s and reflects the compounded impact of an energy crisis, persistent inflation, and the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.
"The German economy is in the midst of its greatest crisis in post-war history," stated HRI chief economist Bert Rurup. Demographic factors, particularly an aging population, are exacerbating the situation. The HRI estimates that Germany's annual growth potential has dropped to just 0.5%. "The economy is at the beginning of a strong aging spurt," Rurup added.
The Federal Statistical Office is expected to confirm the contraction for 2024 when it releases official data on January 15. While HRI predicts a slight economic recovery in 2026, growth is expected to reach only 0.9%, significantly below pre-crisis levels. The German central bank also revised its growth forecast for 2025 in December, lowering it from 1.1% to 0.2%.
Energy crisis
One of the key drivers of Germany's economic troubles is the loss of access to affordable Russian gas. The country's reliance on liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the US has driven energy costs higher, severely affecting manufacturers and small businesses. Rising costs have led to shutdowns and bankruptcies across several industries, including major players such as Volkswagen.
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Before the escalation of the Ukraine conflict, Germany depended on Russian gas for over half of its energy needs. EU sanctions against Russia led to drastic reductions in gas deliveries, culminating in the destruction of the Nord Stream pipelines in September 2022. Most recently, Russia officially suspended gas transit to the EU through Ukraine on January 1, 2025 following Ukraine's refusal to renew the transit agreement.
Economic struggles
Germany's export sector, particularly high-value manufacturing, remains a relative strength, but even it faces challenges from global instability and soaring energy prices. Former Chancellor Angela Merkel has criticized the decision to cut ties with Russian gas, calling the past arrangement a "win-win situation" in a December interview with France 2 TV. "Now prices have exploded," she remarked.
Economic concerns have become a central issue for Germans. A December poll by ARD identified the economy as the top voter priority.
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