
German industrial orders unexpectedly rise in April
June 5 (Reuters) - German industrial orders unexpectedly rose in April thanks to strong domestic demand, the federal statistics office said on Thursday.
Orders rose by 0.6% on the previous month on a seasonally and calendar-adjusted basis. A Reuters poll of analysts had pointed to a fall of 1.0%.
The less volatile three-month on three-month comparison showed that new orders in the period from February to April were 0.5% higher than in the previous three months.
The statistics office also revised the data for March to a 3.4% increase on the month, instead of the previous 3.6%.
Foreign orders fell by 0.3% on the month, with new orders from the euro zone increasing by 0.5% and new orders from outside the euro zone declining by 0.9%. Domestic orders rose by 2.2% on the month, the statistics office said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
31 minutes ago
- Reuters
BP shortlists former Centrica chief Laidlaw as potential chair, Sky News reports
June 21 (Reuters) - BP (BP.L), opens new tab is considering Sam Laidlaw, the former chief executive of British Gas owner Centrica (CNA.L), opens new tab, as a leading candidate to succeed Helge Lund as chair, Sky News reported on Saturday. The timing and status of Laidlaw's engagement with BP remain unclear, the report said. Ken MacKenzie, who retired as chair of mining group BHP ( opens new tab earlier this year, has also been approached about the role, Sky News added. BP declined to comment. Lund was re-elected in April with sharply reduced support amid pressure from activist investor Elliott Management and criticism from climate-focused shareholders, some of whom had called for a vote against Lund. Nearly 25% of BP shareholders opposed Lund's re-election at the annual general meeting. BP subsequently announced he would step down, likely in 2026. Board member Amanda Blanc is in charge of finding Lund's successor.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Ukraine asks allies to allocate 0.25% of GDP to boost its weapon production
KYIV, June 21 (Reuters) - President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has called on Ukraine's Western partners to allocate 0.25% of their GDP to helping Kyiv ramp-up weapons production and said the country plans to sign agreements this summer to start exporting weapon production technologies. In remarks released for publication by his office on Saturday, Zelenskiy said Ukraine was in talks with Denmark, Norway, Germany, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Lithuania to launch joint weapon production.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
I'll stay in UK if Reeves drops non-dom raid, says castle-owning reality TV star
A celebrity couple moving to Italy to escape Rachel Reeves's non-dom tax raid have vowed to stay in the UK if the Chancellor reverses her plans. Ann Kaplan Mulholland, a former TV star from The Real Housewives of Toronto, and her plastic surgery tycoon husband, Stephen Mulholland, said they would cancel their planned move to Milan if the Government changed course on its proposals. 'Should Rachel Reeves reverse the non-dom tax raid we would, without question, stay in the UK,' said the Canadian businesswoman, who co-owns Lympne castle in Kent. Earlier this year, Ms Kaplan Mulholland vowed to move to Italy because she said the Treasury's non-dom plans would take an 'astronomical amount' of her £500m fortune. Italy's tax regime is luring more disenchanted multimillionaires from overseas by offering an annual €200,000 (£170,000) flat tax on overseas income for new residents no matter how much they earn. Ms Kaplan Mulholland said that Britain should copy the lump sum, which can save millionaires significant sums in tax. She said that such a move 'would solve the bleed of investors such as ourselves exiting the UK and drive the economy in England in a positive direction'. Labour's raid on the wealthy has already led a number of millionaires to flee the UK, triggering Ms Reeves to weigh up a reversal on her decision to charge 40pc inheritance tax on people's global assets. Senior City sources told The Telegraph last week that they had been in talks with the Government about how to 'create something more competitive'. The Chancellor scrapped the non-dom status in April, a move which had been widely expected, but also introduced the inheritance tax changes which have since been blamed for driving ultra-rich individuals abroad. A number of high profile businessmen, including Goldman Sachs' most senior banker outside the US, Richard Gnodde, and Aston Villa co-owner, Nassef Sawiris, have left Britain in the wake of the tax raid. Ms Kaplan Mulholland said the couple had invested heavily in the UK economy in recent years, purchasing a number of properties and a castle in Kent which she said employed almost 100 people. 'We are in the process of opening a third restaurant and a luxury hotel. None of this would have been considered and we would not have chosen the UK as our home or as an investment under the new regime. It is unfortunate. 'At this time we are well into the application process to move to Italy. 'The requirements and terms for an Italian tax-domicile are preferable for both the investor and the economy. Italy requires a €200,0000 [£170,000] plus €35,0000 spouse tax per annum but, unlike the UK, there is no tax on foreign assets or inheritance tax.'