German industrial production rose by more than expected in April, data showed yesterday, reviving hopes the sector can extend an upturn in Europe’s biggest economy after orders data disappointed.

Industrial output rose by 0.8 per cent on the month after dropping by an upwardly revised 0.1 per cent the previous month, data from the Economy Ministry showed. That beat the consensus forecast in a Reuters poll for a gain of 0.5 per cent.

The upturn was driven by a surge in energy production and factories churning out more intermediate goods. But construction activity edged down and fewer consumer goods rolled off production lines.

“The German economic recovery has entered its ninth year and there are no signs that this recovery could come to an abrupt halt,” said Carsten Brzeski, an economist at ING.

“Today’s industrial production data have not only confirmed this growth picture but actually provide further evidence that this recovery could gain even more momentum,” he added.

Other recent data has painted a mixed picture of the sector.

The output figures follow yesterday’s data  that showed industrial orders dropping far more than expected in April, as factories lacked new contracts for big ticket items.

Figures from the VDMA industry association have shown engineering orders falling but a recent purchasing managers’ survey showed factory output increasing at the strongest pace in more than six years, as demand from German and foreign clients rose.

The Economy Ministry said production remained on an upward trend, with solid order levels and sales plus a strong business climate pointing to a continued upturn in the industrial and construction sectors.

The German economy pulled off 1.9 per cent growth last year on rising private consumption, state spending and construction. It continued to expand early this year, with higher exports helping to drive 0.6 per cent growth in the first quarter.

Ulrike Kastens, an economist at Sal. Oppenheim, said the industrial sector had experienced a good start to the second quarter and she expected second quarter growth to roughly mirror the level of the first three months of the year.

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