06:04 AM EST, 02/21/2025 (MT Newswires) -- After a decent start to 2024, last year ended on a weak note as the eurozone economy fell back into an all-too-familiar stagnation, said ING.
The start of 2025 shows signs of stabilization, with Friday's composite PMI for the eurozone at 50.2 in February, unchanged from last month, wrote the bank in a note. This suggests continued muddling through around 0%.
That's not great, but there's at least no sign of activity deteriorating further, pointed out ING. The weakness was concentrated in France as Germany and the rest of the eurozone showed expanding output.
Manufacturing has shown some signs of bottoming out, with the manufacturing output PMI increasing from 47.1 to 48.7. This still indicates contraction, but the pace of the decline is slowing, stated the bank.
Services are still showing growth, but this is despite weakening new business. Consumer confidence crept up a bit in February but remained solidly below the long-term average. The downbeat consumer is causing household consumption to remain muted amid global uncertainty, which holds back service activity, added ING.
With orders still declining, businesses indicating that they are reducing workforces and possibly disruptive tariffs on the table, the outlook remains very uncertain for the coming months. Stock markets have become more upbeat about Europe recently, but improving sentiment is difficult to justify looking at the short-term outlook, according to the bank.
Even though the European Central Bank seems convinced that inflation is under control, cost pressures do continue to creep up for businesses. In February, the PMI again flagged rising input costs that are being priced through to the consumer to some extent.
Then again, it's a stretch to expect a marked flare-up of medium-term inflation in the current weak demand environment. ING sees the ECB continuing to lower rates for the time being.