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Holger Zschaepitz

Holger Zschaepitz

Holger Zschäpitz (* 1971) ist ein deutscher Journalist, Autor und Redakteur. Er ist leitender Wirtschaftsredakteur bei der Zeitung Die Welt

https://twitter.com/Schuldensuehner

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from Germany…

Good Morning from Germany, where electricity prices are now regularly falling below zero around midday. On May 1, they even dropped to the floor at -49.999 cents per kilowatt hour. The reason is simple: we are generating more solar power than we can use or store. As a result, Germany has to cover the gap between these negative market prices and the guaranteed feed-in tariffs paid to producers—an expensive outcome. These prices are a clear indication of the utterly disastrous energy transition.

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from Germany, where...

Good Morning from Germany, where private-sector activity unexpectedly shrank as the Iran war triggered the steepest drop in the services sector in more than three years. S&P's Composite German PMI fell to 48.3 in April, down from 51.9 in March. That pushed it below the 50 mark, which separates growth from contraction, for 1st time since May 2025. Analysts polled by BBG had expected only a smaller decline, to 51.2. The sharp fall in the services PMI likely reflects the surge in uncertainty following the Iran war. Since this index is heavily driven by domestic demand, it suggests that consumers have become much more cautious.

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from Germany, where consensus growth forecasts…

Good Morning from Germany, where consensus growth forecasts, which had been remarkably slow to change, are now starting to drift lower. Growth of just 0.8% is now expected for this year, and 1.4% for 2027. Bank of America is the most pessimistic on this year, forecasting growth of just 0.3%, while Credit Agricole is the most pessimistic on next year, at 0.8%.

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from Germany…

Good Morning from Germany, which is weighing a strategic natural gas reserve to protect supplies in a worst-case crisis. The proposed emergency reserve would total ~24TWh, equal to ~10% of the country’s gas storage capacity. In the event of a complete import cutoff, it could keep households and businesses supplied for roughly 2 weeks in a normal winter, or 1 week in an icy one. The one-off cost is estimated at €500mln to €1.5bn. https://bloomberg.com/news/articles/ 2026-04-09/germany-fleshes-out-emergency-gas-reserve-plan-to-deflect-shocks?utm_source=website&utm_medium=share&utm_campaign=twitter?sref=R17xFhjo

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from #Germany where the social contribution…

Good Morning from #Germany where the social contribution burden keeps rising. A new study says the Social Contribution Memorial Day shifts to April 11 in 2026, 2 days later than a year earlier, mainly due to higher health and long-term care costs. The broader social spending ratio has climbed to 31.2% of GDP, while the welfare state’s implicit debt now stands at 204.9% of GDP.

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from Germany…

Good Morning from Germany, where the public deficit rose to €127bn in 2025, up from €104bn a year earlier. That is the highest level since the 2022 energy crisis. The biggest increases came at the federal and local government levels. Higher federal spending was meant in part to support the social security system. Pension insurance, for example, received a subsidy that was €6.5bn higher than in 2024. The govt also provided loans to the Federal Employment Agency (€1.4bn), the health insurance system (€2.3bn), and the long-term care insurance system (€0.5bn).

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from Germany…

Good Morning from Germany, where officials are warning that the Iran crisis could cut 2026 growth in half. Internal estimates suggest expansion of just 0.5% in a worst-case scenario, and 0.6% to 0.7% even under less severe assumptions of persistently high oil and gas prices. Slower growth would put additional strain on public finances by reducing tax revenues, prompting discussions about a possible increase in VAT from 19% to at least 21%. https://bloomberg.com/news/articles/ 2026-03-26/germany-sees-danger-of-2026-growth-rate-halving-on-iran-crisis?utm_source=website&utm_medium=share&utm_campaign=twitter

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from Germany…

Good Morning from Germany, where Chancellor Merz faces a second electoral test after his CDU suffered a bruising defeat in a wealthy southwestern state two weeks ago. A failure to take power in the wine-growing region of Rhineland-Palatinate would be another setback for the CDU. But a loss for the rival Social Democrats – who have governed the state for 35 years – would be even more damaging, deepening the party’s crisis after its worst-ever result on March 8 in neighboring Baden-Württemberg. Polls point to a tightening race, with the CDU’s lead over the SPD narrowing. The vote will also serve as a key test of support for the far-right AfD. https://bloomberg.com/news/articles/ 2026-03-21/merz-s-latest-regional-election-test-may-produce-no-real-winners?utm_source=website&utm_medium=share&utm_campaign=twitter

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from #Germany…

Good Morning from #Germany, where 10y govt bond yields have risen >3%, their highest level since 2011. The recent increase is driven disproportionately by higher long-term inflation expectations – meaning real 10y yields have fallen from 1.35% to 0.77%. The chart tells a striking story: between 2014 and 2022, real yields were negative, allowing Germany to effectively reduce its debt while “sleeping.” Only since 2022 – and especially after the suspension of the debt brake in 2025 – have investors once again begun to demand positive and higher real interest rates.

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from Germany…

Good Morning from Germany, where newly issued debt has so far not been used for investment, but rather to finance election giveaways & plug budget holes – once again proving the laws of political economy. Acc to Ifo, public borrowing rose by €24.3bn in 2025, but federal investment increased by just €1.3bn compared w/2024. That leaves an investment gap of €23bn – a misallocation rate of ~95%.

Holger Zschaepitz: Hello from Germany…

Hello from Germany, where investor confidence plummets on the Iran war. An expectations index by the ZEW institute decreased to -0.5 in March from 58.3 in Feb. That’s below all estimates in a Bloomberg survey, which had foreseen a reading of 39.2. It is the least since Donald Trump first unveiled his tariffs last April. https://bloomberg.com/news/articles/ 2026-03-17/german-investor-outlook-slumps-as-iran-war-threatens-recovery?sref=R17xFhjo

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning from Germany...

Good Morning from Germany, where petrol prices were already high before recent geopolitical tensions. At the end of February, the avg price for a litre of gasoline in Germany was ~€1.82 at the pump, among the highest in the EU. With oil prices poised to jump if the conflict in the Middle East escalates Brent could rise toward €75/bbl or more once markets reopen. German petrol prices could climb >€1.90 per litre.

Holger Zschaepitz: Good Morning back from Germany...

Good Morning back from Germany, where house prices at the start of the year fell more sharply than at any point since 2023. The Europace House Price Composite Index declined by 0.27% in January compared MoM, w/prices for existing homes falling in particular. One key reason is the sharp rise in mortgage rates. At the same time, rents jumped by 0.7% MoM in January, likely boosting demand for owner-occupied housing and helping stabilize prices.