Our nowcasts for Q3 2025 highlight resilient GDP growth in the Eurozone and France. In Italy and Germany, two economies that suffered a setback in Q2 after a very good Q1, we expect growth to strengthen in Q3 and more markedly in Q4. The UK, meanwhile, is expected to see growth slow in Q3 (after a very strong H1 2025), before rebounding in Q4. In the US, the Atlanta Fed's GDP Now suggests another upside surprise for Q3 growth (1% q/q), before a backlash and a sharp slowdown in Q4. In Japan and China, the slowdown would occur as early as Q3, after a good H1.
The recovery in PMI indices continues despite a decline in industry. In September 2025, the composite PMI reached its highest level since May 2024 (51.2), an improvement attributable to services (51.4). However, the manufacturing index, which had been recovering sharply since the beginning of the year, declined in September (-1.2 points to 49.5). Industrial production rose by 0.3% m/m in July. The economic sentiment index stabilised in Q3.
Rates on new investment loans (irf>5 years) to non-financial corporations in the Eurozone fell very slightly in July 2025 for the second consecutive month. At 3.58%, however, they remained close to their June 2025 level. Rates on new treasury loans (floating rate and irf<3 months) to NFCs fell slightly more sharply to 3.31%. Conversely, rates on new loans to households for house purchase and consumption rose just as modestly (by +1 bp and +6 bp m/m, respectively). They stood at 3.30% and 7.41%, respectively.
The decline in the IFO index in September does not impede the upward trend that began in early 2025. The relative weakness in September particularly affected services and retail trade. However, there has been a clear improvement since the beginning of the year in German industry, construction and wholesale trade. This momentum has not yet spread to the rest of the economy, whilst awaiting the effective implementation of investment plans, with a ramp-up expected in Q4.
In France, the improvement in certain sectors is not spreading to others. The composite business climate has been stable for five months, at 96. Several sectors benefited from an improvement in Q2, including aeronautics, information and communication, and construction (to a lesser extent). These sectors continue to outperform in Q3, but without this spreading to other sectors; they should therefore continue to support growth in Q3. However, growth is vulnerable to a slowdown in these sectors in the absence of other drivers.
In September, the economic sentiment index remained below its long-term average, held back by industry with a production index still in negative territory (-17.4) and production forecasts declining (-0.9). This contrasts with the rise in Italian's industrial production. In services, sentiment is improving (+2.5; +0.2 pts) but activity is struggling to take off. However, expectations for demand in the coming months are rising (6.3, the highest since April 2024; +4.6 pts).
In Spain, business confidence strengthened in September and remains well above its long-term average. In industry, the index remains in contraction territory but is improving (-4.7; +1.1 pts m/m). Production expectations for the coming months have risen significantly since spring (3.2 vs. -0.4 on average in Q2), although they are down compared with last month (-1.1 pts).
The composite PMI has been in expansionary territory for five months. However, it fell to 50.1 in September (-3.4 pts m/m), dragged down by the services PMI (50.8; -3.4 pts m/m), which had reached an 18-month high in August. The manufacturing PMI was weakened in September by the ‘production’ and ‘new export orders’ sub-components. The July decline in industrial production suggests a backlash after a surge in growth linked to expectations of US tariff increases.
The non-manufacturing ISM fell markedly in September to 50.0. This result was due to a decline in business activity and new orders components. Manufacturing ISM improved to 49.1 in September, driven by output growth (51.0). However, new orders contracted (48.9), particularly those for export (43.0). The rise in prices paid slowed for the third consecutive month (61.9).
The Tankan survey reported an improvement in large Japonese manufacturing companies' sentiment (14) in Q3, including in the motor vehicles sector (10). The overall figure (all enterprises and all industries) remained stable (10). The Services PMI remained stable at a high level (53) in September, while the Manufacturing PMI (48.4) fell to a five-month low due to the first contraction in hiring (49.4) since November 2024 and a decline in output (47.3, -2.5 pp).
In the Chinese manufacturing sector, the official PMI has remained in contraction territory since April, but it improved to 49.8 in September. The PMI published by RatingDog (formerly Caixin) also improved (to 51.2 from 50.5 in August and 49.5 in July). This slight recovery is notably due to the “new export orders” sub-component, which reached 47.8 in the official index – a level that, while still in contraction territory, is at its highest since March. The export sector continues to withstand the rise in US tariffs.
Our Q2 2025 nowcasts highlight the resilience of the Eurozone and, to a lesser extent, France. Weaker exports (after their surge in Q1 in anticipation of the US trade tariffs) penalises our forecast in Q2. It’s the opposite for the US with the Atlanta Fed nowcast at +0.7% for Q2. However, US GDP growth is estimated to have slowed down; that of the Eurozone is expected to be more stable. Japan is not expected to emerge from the stagnation observed in Q1.
The composite PMI index was stable at 50.2 in June, remaining above the expansion threshold in the first half of the year. The upturn in the manufacturing index slowed but continued (+0.1 pt to 49.5). It was driven in particular by new orders, with the index back above the 50 threshold for the first time in three years. The services PMI is unchanged.
The decline in borrowing rates in the Eurozone resumed, except for investment loans. New investment loan rates (IRF > 5 years) to non-financial corporations in the eurozone remained stable in May 2025, at 3.67%, for the third consecutive month. By contrast, rates on new treasury loans (variable rate and IRF < 3 months) to corporates continued to fall (-25 bps m/m) to 3.38%. Rates on new loans for house purchases and loans for consumption to households also declined, but much more modestly (-2 bps m/m). They stood at 3.32% and 7.48%, respectively.
The IFO business climate continues to improve (+0.9 points in June compared to the previous month, to 88.4), supported by favourable economic prospects. The early measures taken by the Merz government (enhanced depreciation allowances for investments, an ambitious budget for public investment until 2025 and a commitment to reduce energy costs for businesses) are fuelling high expectations. These are also reflected in the PMI index, which is picking up in both the manufacturing and services sectors.
Business climate: improvement confirmed in construction. The business climate continues to be quite low, with 96 in June and in May (97 in March-April). The rebound was moderate in services (from 95 to 96, compared with 98 in April) while the index contracted from 97 to 96 in industry. The construction index has benefitted from a revival of activity in new construction since May 2025 and has thus returned to its long-term average (100) for the past two months (it had been below this average between September 2024 and April 2025).
Business climate: the improvement continues. The economic sentiment index has been improving for two months, reaching 98.6 in June (+0.2 points m/m). The indicator for industry remains weak but is back to its highest level in 13 months, with production and hiring expectations for the coming months improving. Industrial production rose year-on-year (+0.1%), the first increase since January 2023. In the services sector, the indicator rose sharply (+0.7 points).
Business climate: favourable, but slightly weaker. In June, the economic sentiment index remained above its long-term average and that of the Eurozone, but weakened for the second consecutive month (102; -1.4 points m/m). The indicator for industry fell by 1.2 points due to a deterioration in production and order books. Industrial companies' expectations for production in the coming months reached their lowest level since February 2021, reflecting a deterioration in the outlook.
Business sentiment improves in all sectors: The composite PMI index rises in June (+1.7 points, to 52), driven by both services (+1.9 points, to 52.8) and industry (+1.3 points, to 47.7). The trade agreement with the United States has reduced uncertainty among businesses, leading to the start of a recovery in export orders (+3 points, to 46.2).
Improvement in the ISM. The manufacturing ISM improved modestly (49.0, +0.5 pp) in June, with a notable jump in output (50.3, +4.9 pp), which entered expansion territory for the first time since February. The non-manufacturing ISM returned to growth territory (50.8, +0.9 pp) thanks to a rebound in activity and new orders. The CEO Economic Outlook declined again in Q2, reaching a five-year low (69.3, -14.7 points). The three components assessed (plans for capital investment, plans for U.S. employment, and expectations for sales) have all fallen.
Favourable developments for the business climate. The manufacturing PMI stood at 50.1 in June (+0.7 pp, the first expansion posted since May 2024) thanks to growth in output (51.2, +2.5 pp). The services sector also improved (51.7, +0.7 pp). In Q2, the Tankan business conditions survey remained stable overall (15) for both the manufacturing (7) and non-manufacturing (21) sectors, despite the issue of US tariffs.
Trade truce. The official PMI for the manufacturing sector has been in contraction territory since April, mainly due to the US-China trade war and worsening export prospects. However, the index rose slightly from 49 to 49.5 in May and 49.7 in June, following the agreement reached between Washington and Beijing (after discussions in London in early May and in Geneva in early June). The Caixin manufacturing PMI even rose above 50 in June (vs. 48.3 in May). In the services sector, the official PMI has been close to 50.3 for the past three months.
Our nowcasts for Q2 2025 deliver a positive message, with significant growth in the Eurozone (+0.3% q/q, after a very solid Q1 at 0.6% q/q), accelerating in France (+0.2% q/q) and rebounding in the United States. For the latter, the Atlanta Federal Reserve's GDPNow (+0.9% q/q) shows a strong improvement due to the highly atypical profile of imports.
Stabilisation in manufacturing, deterioration in services. The manufacturing PMI continues to improve in May, rising above the services index for the first time since March 2022. The composite indicator fell back below 50. The European Commission's economic sentiment index climbed in May (+1 pt to 94.8) but remains well below its long-term average (100).
Business climate: better prospects. According to the Ifo survey, the business climate continued to improve in May (+0.6 points m/m to 87.5), driven by the improvement in the economic outlook (+1.5 points). The services index declined for the second consecutive month, while the manufacturing sector continued to show signs of improvement. Nevertheless, the index remains below its long-term average (95.6), signaling a fragile recovery amid high uncertainty.