Alexis Xydias and Adria Cimino report for Bloomberg today that
“Net income for companies in the Stoxx Europe 600 Index will rise by 10.5 percent in 2012 after increasing 11 percent this year, led by carmakers such as Porsche SE and retailers including Burberry Group Plc, according to more than 12,000 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The gauge is headed for four straight years of income growth exceeding 10 percent, the longest streak since 1998, data show”, and that European profit growth
“….. will exceed the 10.1 percent estimated for U.S. companies, even though the economy in the 17-nation euro zone is expanding at one-third the pace….”
The reason that profits are growing much faster than nominal GDP in Europe and the US is that the dominant European and US companies increasingly depend on revenues and profits generated globally. Emerging market economies are doing much better and growing much faster than developed economies. They are playing catch up adopting proven technologies and through the absorption of labour from low productivity employment in agriculture to much more productive engagements in factories that fully participate in global supply chains without push back from trade unions protecting established workers. Yet wages are rising rapidly as competition for workers builds up. And these fast growing economies have not yet made promises of welfare benefits funded by taxpayers that are now proving impossible to fulfil. The cloud on their economic horizons is a meltdown in demands from Europe and perhaps the US- where the economic outlook now looks a lot more promising than a few months ago. The opportunity these rapidly emerging economies have is to rely much more on domestic rather than foreign consumers.
It is these same consumers in the emerging economies that are already proving so helpful to the profits of companies listed in Europe and the US. The willingness of these profitable global companies to add productive capacity and to employment in their home economies would be greatly assisted by a sense that their own governments are coming to grips with the necessity to spend less so as to grow faster and in this way overcome their debt problems