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Eurozone’s third-quarter growth surge could prove to be an illusion

The eurozone grew by a more-than-expected at 0.4% quarter-on-quarter in the third quarter. That was the strongest quarterly growth in two years. However, underlying growth dynamics are weaker than the headline figure suggests.

Photo: Dreamstime.

For starters, there is the extremely volatile Irish contribution caused by the accounting practices of multinationals based in Ireland, which added 0.1 percentage point to eurozone growth. And French GDP received a significant boost from the Olympics, something that will not be repeated in the fourth quarter.

The unexpected 0.2% growth in Germany was mainly driven by government expenditure and household consumption, as well as the downward revision of second-quarter growth. But worsening job perspectives, highlighted by the announced closure of three German Volkswagen factories, and ongoing policy uncertainty, might dampen German household consumption growth in the coming quarters.

The fourth quarter started with rather muted sentiment data. The PMI composite increased marginally but remained in contraction territory, while the European Commission's sentiment indicator fell in October. The inventory correction in manufacturing is still ongoing, with orders declining.

At the same time, the growth pace in services is softening. On the positive side, there is improving confidence in the retail sector, a sign that, for the time being, households are spending some of the increased real income.

And though it might still take a few months before registering growth, confidence data in the construction sector has been creeping higher for four consecutive months. Nevertheless, analysts remain convinced that the winter quarter will see little growth, if at all.

Uncertainty stemming from a second Trump presidency regarding upcoming tariffs, deregulation in the US and American support for Ukraine might weigh on eurozone economic sentiment. A winter recession can no longer be excluded.

From the second quarter of 2025 onward, growth might start to pick up gradually. With a likely increase of US import tariffs, net exports are expected to be less of a growth driver in 2026.

On the back of the stronger-than-expected third-quarter growth in 2024, experts have had to adjust their growth forecast for this year marginally to 0.7%. For 2025, they keep their 0.6% growth forecast, while we have downgraded our outlook for 2026 from 1.3% to 1.1%.

Inflation temporarily higher
After the better-than-expected September inflation, October data was a bit disappointing. Headline inflation rose to 2% year-on-year, while core inflation stabilised at 2.7% YoY. Month-on-month service price growth accelerated again.

More information:
ING
www.think.ing.com

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