Eurozone Settles Into Lower Gear

 | Apr 24, 2018 07:01

  • Flash PMI unchanged in April, signals slowest expansion since start of 2017
  • Surveys still indicative of solid c0.6% GDP growth
  • Softer rises in new orders and export sales, plus lower optimism, suggests growth could weaken in May
  • The eurozone economy remained stuck in a lower gear in April, with business activity expanding at a rate unchanged in March, which had in turn been the slowest since the start of 2017.

    The IHS Markit Eurozone PMI held steady at 55.2 in April, according to flash survey data, which are based on an early-cut of approximately 80% of final responses. The unchanged reading indicated the joint-weakest expansion of business output since the start of 2017, but remained well above the average of 53.8 seen over the past five years.

    While the survey data indicate that growth has downshifted markedly since the peak at the start of the year, importantly the rate of expansion still remains impressively robust, and not just by eurozone standards. The April data are running at a level broadly consistent with eurozone GDP growth of 0.6% at the start of the second quarter.

    h3 Eurozone PMI v GDP estimates/h3