German business morale weakened for a second month in a row in June, a leading survey showed today, suggesting concerns about the Greek debt crisis are hitting the mood in corporate boardrooms across Europe's largest economy.
Ifo's business climate index, based on a monthly survey of some 7,000 firms, dropped to 107.4 in June from 108.5 in May.
That was its weakest reading since February and was below the Reuters consensus forecast for a reading of 108.1.
Athens urgently needs cash to avoid defaulting on a loan repayment to the IMF next week.
Fears about the risk of a default have prompted savers to withdraw billions from Greek banks, forcing the European Central Bank to increase emergency liquidity assistance to keep them afloat.
Ifo economist Klaus Wohlrabe said the Greek crisis was not yet hitting orders but it was causing uncertainty.
While German economic growth slowed to 0.3% in the first quarter, many economists expect it to grow faster in the three months from April to June given that the latest data has shown orders, output, exports and retail sales all rising.
Earlier this week the finance ministry said the German economy had a good start to the second quarter and indicators pointed to the upturn continuing.
The Ifo survey showed companies felt more downbeat about their current situation than in May and were also more pessimistic about their outlook for the next six months.
Sentiment in the manufacturing, wholesaling and retailing sectors weakened but the mood among construction firms improved.
Last week Ifo revised up its expectations for German growth to 1.9% for this year as the country rides high on a tide of private consumption thanks to record-low unemployment.