Our nowcasts for Q2 point to moderate growth in the Eurozone (+0.2% q/q) and France (+0.1% q/q). The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow suggests a rebound in US growth (+0.3% q/q) after the slight contraction in Q1.
The business climate is holding up. The composite PMI decreased (50.1) but remains in expansion area. The manufacturing index persists in negative territory but is getting better for the fourth month in a row. Expectations of activity in services fell sharply (53.1, the lowest level in five years).
The business climate remains fragile. The IFO index has been rising since the beginning of 2025, including in April (86.9, +0.2 pp m/m, historical average of 95.7). However, the economic outlook has darkened as a result of the trade tensions triggered by the protectionist shift in the United States. These tensions have now spread to the services sector (flash PMI down to 48.8 in April). Industry is showing signs of stabilisation, but the situation remains fragile.
Mixed business climate. A slight deterioration was noticeable in April (from 97 to 96), due to a decline in retail sales and a deterioration in construction activity to a new low. The manufacturing index benefited from a rebound in production, particularly in the aeronautics industry. Despite a slight improvement, the services index remains below its long-term average.
Business sentiment deteriorated sharply in April. Confidence in the services sector is at its lowest since October 2022, causing the economic sentiment index to plunge. Confidence in industry continues to deteriorate (-0.6pt m/m), also due to a decline in order-book levels.
Business sentiment remains buoyant. The European Commission's economic sentiment index has been rising for three months (103.8; +0.4 points m/m), driven by an improvement in industry (-4.2; +1.3 pt). Indices of production expectations for the months ahead and of stocks of finished products are improving.
Business climate is deteriorating: the services PMI (48.9) catch up the industrial PMI (45.4) in contraction territory in April, as does the composite PMI (48.2). The index of new export orders in the manufacturing sector (not taken into account in the calculation of the manufacturing PMI) plunges and approaches the lows reached during Covid.
A Downbeat Business Climate. The ISM Manufacturing index has declined for 4 consecutive months, and reached 48.6 in April (-0.2pp). Production, employment and new orders were all in contraction territory. The price-paid index (69.8) stood at its highest since 2022. Meanwhile, the ISM Non-Manufacturing index remained positive but slowed (50.8 in March vs. 54.1 in December 2024).
Services Driving Business Climate Up. Growth in activity resumed in April according to the Composite PMI (51.1, +2.2pp), supported by the Services PMI (52.2, +2.2pp). By contrast, the Manufacturing PMI remained in contraction territory (48.5, +0.1pp), penalized by the largest deterioration in new orders since February 2024.
Widespread deterioration. The official PMI for the manufacturing sector fell to 49 in April (from 50.5 in March) and the Caixin PMI fell to 50.4 (from 51.2 in March). The decline is widespread across all sub-components and heralds a significant slowdown in activity after the rebound in March. These are the immediate consequences of the new 145% tariffs imposed by the US on Chinese imports.
Our nowcasts for Q1 show moderate growth in the euro zone (+0.2% q/q) and in France (+0.1% q/q). The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow, on the other hand, suggests the risk of a significant slowdown in US growth in Q1. In other countries, our forecasts are for continued outperformance in Spain, rebounding growth in Italy and the UK, and moderate growth in Japan. In Germany, growth is likely to remain weak in Q1, with the upside risks associated with the next government taking office more likely to affect Q2. Chinese growth is exposed to downside risks.
The unemployment rate held steady at 6.2% in January, an all-time low. Declines are most marked in southern Europe and Ireland, while the unemployment rate is relatively stable in France and Germany. Negotiated wages rose by 4.1% y/y in Q4 2024, less than in Q3 (5.4% y/y) but still well ahead of inflation.
The IFO business climate index remained stable in February compared with January, at 85.2, and remains close to the low recorded in November (84.7). It is the situation of industry that is having the greatest impact. Industrial output, including construction, contracted again, by 0.7% q/q in Q4 (the 6th fall in 7 quarters). However, January's figures show a slight rebound (+0.6% month-on-month on the 3-month moving average).
Household confidence rebounded from 89 in December to 93 in February (95 in September, 100 on long-term average). The balance of opinion on past price trends, at -5 in February, reached its lowest level since July 2021. On the other hand, the balance of opinion on fears of unemployment rose again in February (+55, compared with +29 in September), fuelling the opportunity to save.
Intentions to make major purchases in the coming year are at their highest level since July 2021. This should enable private consumption to further buoy Italian growth. For the time being, hard data remains disappointing: new vehicle registrations are slowing (-3.3% 3m/3m in February), as are retail sales volumes (-0.4% 3m/3m in January).
The composite PMI (55.1 in February compared with 54 in January) was buoyed by the services component (PMI at 56.2; +1.3 pt). Nevertheless, industrial activity is deteriorating sharply, with industrial output down by 1% y/y in January (-22.8% y/y for vehicles) and the manufacturing PMI falling below 50 for the first time in over a year in February (49.7; -1.3 pt).
Household sentiment deteriorated in February according to the Conference Board (98.3, -7.0 pts) and even more in March according to the University of Michigan (57.9, -6.8 pts), dragged down by worsening expectations. According to the University of Michigan survey, the jump in 1-year inflation expectations (+4.1%, +1.0 pp) was accompanied by a 30-year record for 5-year expectations (+3.5%, +0.3 pp).
The GfK index rose in February (+2 points to -22), but did not erase January's fall. The balance of opinion on the one-year financial outlook is back in positive territory. Retail sales rebounded by 1.6% m/m in January, after four months of decline. This upturn was confirmed by the BRC/KPMG survey, which showed retail sales (smoothed over three months) up by 2.2% y/y in February.
The upward trend in nominal wages continued in January, with contractual wages scheduled to rise by 3.2% y/y, a record since 1992. However, the real wages index fell sharply to -1.8% y/y in January (-2.1 pp), its lowest level since March 2024. At the same time, the unemployment rate was stable at 2.5%.
Manufacturing PMIs rebounded in February, returning to their average level of Q4 2024 (50.2 for the NBS index and 50.8 for the Caixin index). In services, the PMIs remain below their Q4 level but are above the expansion threshold (50 for the NBS index and 51.4 for the Caixin index). The latest activity data confirm this reassuring but rather lacklustre performance: growth in industrial production slowed in January-February after accelerating in December, but held steady at almost 6% y/y. The slowdown in growth in production in services was more marked (+5.6% y/y in January-February, vs. +6.3% in Q4).
GDP figures for Q4 2024 confirm a clear divergence between growth which is sustained in the US (0.6% q/q) or accelerating in China (1.6% q/q), and mixed performances in Europe with a stagnating GDP: -0.2% in Germany, -0.1% in France or stagnation in Italy, compared to +0.8% in Spain. In Japan and the UK, these figures have not yet been published, but our estimates are 0.2% and 0.3% q/q, respectively.
Economic surveys - for households and companies - started the year on a slightly more positive note. Consumer confidence (+0.3 points) benefited from a slight fall in indicators for unemployment and inflation prospects. The composite PMI index returned to expansion territory (+0.6 points to 50.2), with the contraction in the manufacturing industry easing slightly (+1.5 points to 46.6), while the services index fell dipped (-0.2 points to 51.4).
The German business climate is being driven down by the prolonged recession in industry. Industrial production (in the broad sense, including construction) has contracted in 10 of the last 12 quarters (including a further negative quarter likely in Q4 2024), for a cumulative drop of 8.4% (-14.7% compared to the peak seen at the end of 2017). This momentum explains the low IFO index.
The French economy remains weak, although it is showing signs of stabilisation. The Insee business climate indicator remained stable at 95 in January, while the composite PMI rebounded slightly (47.6 in January compared to 47.5 in December).
As expected, Italian growth failed to outperform that of the Eurozone in 2024 (average annual growth of 0.5% versus 0.7% respectively). In addition, it remained at a standstill in Q4 (0.0% q/q) for the second consecutive quarter.