By Carla Mozee, MarketWatch

ZEW sentiment survey underscores worries

LONDON (MarketWatch) -- German stocks dropped more than 1% Tuesday, taking a hit after the ZEW sentiment survey plunged, missing already low expectations and underscoring anxiety about slowing in Europe's largest economy.

"Fear is back," said ING economist Carsten Brzeski in a note. "The German ZEW just sent more signs of caution, showing ... financial-market participants are increasingly becoming pessimistic."

The closely watched ZEW indicator of economic expectations fell to 8.6 in August, significantly below an estimated 18.0 reading from a Wall Street Journal poll of analysts. The drop likely stemmed largely from worries about Russia's conflict with Ukraine, as German industries have for months been warning that sanctions against Russia will crunch their businesses.

The Center for European Economic Research, which conducts the ZEW survey, said figures on industrial production and incoming orders "suggest markedly reduced investment activities on the part of German firms against the backdrop of uncertain sales prospects."

The lead ZEW indicator is now at its lowest level since December 2012 and marked the eighth consecutive month that expectations for the economy worsened.

Market reaction: Henkel AG & Co. shares suffered the biggest losses on Germany's DAX 30 index, sliding 5.5% after the German consumer-products company warned that it foresees "the escalation of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict as well as the persisting political turmoil in the Middle East to have a negative impact" on the market environment.

The DAX 30 index fell 1.2% to 9,069.47. Only two index members managed to advance, with Commerzbank AG picking up 1.5% and Adidas AG up 0.7%. The DAX is down nearly 10% from its all-time high of 10,050.98, reached on June 20.

The euro (EURUSD) dropped to a near nine-month low against the U.S. dollar after the dreary ZEW results. The euro was buying $1.3360, down from $1.3384 in North American trade late Monday. In the fixed-income market, the yield on the 10-year German bund shed less than 1 basis point to 1.060%, remaining near record lows.

The Stoxx Europe 600 fell 0.2% to 328.74.

Views: So far, the fallout of the crisis in Ukraine has been limited to a general return of uncertainty and a sharp drop in German exports to Russia, but further escalation of the crisis "could start to really hurt the economy," wrote ING's Brzeski. "This is why strengthening domestic demand, particularly domestic investment, should continue to be a top priority for all policymakers. Just hoping for the positive World Cup effect might not be enough."

Meanwhile, Germany's purchasing managers' index surveys, due Aug. 21, may be the "next shoe to drop," said Ashraf Laidi, chief global strategist at City Index, in a note Tuesday. "Any pullback towards the 50-level will trigger the alarms with regards to the euro zone's biggest economy," he wrote.

Laidi pointed out that more than 500 German manufacturing and services companies are respondents in the PMI surveys, compared with up to 350 financial and economic analysts for the ZEW. "The PMI's greater pool of respondents may be a reason behind dampened volatility in the surveys."

In other European markets Tuesday, France's CAC 40 lost 0.9% to end at 4,162.16, and the U.K.'s FTSE 100 shed less than 1 point.

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