Eurozone Industrial Production Slumps In August Despite Previous Optimism

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Industrial production fell in the Eurozone by 1.2% month-on-month in August, following a 0.3% rebound in July. This serves as a warning sign that the economy is not accelerating despite business confidence improving

Oof. Despite a boost in industry optimism about production in August, according to the PMI, the reality turned out to be much less positive. A big decline in capital and durable consumer goods production caused overall production to tick down to the lowest level since January.

And this was despite a surge in production in Ireland – which is notoriously volatile – of 9.8% month-on-month. Without Ireland, the reading would have been much weaker as Germany, Italy and Greece all posted sizeable declines of more than 2%, while France and Spain posted smaller declines of under 1%. Dutch production was a bright spot among the larger industrial countries, with a 2.3% increase.

Despite optimism among manufacturers returning, the hard data is telling a different story at the moment. After a peak in production related to the US frontloading of European goods, the past few months have shown a declining trend again. Production is still elevated compared to late-2024 levels, but is quickly moving back in that direction.

Sizeable Eurozone investment plans will take time to materialise, which means that while optimism about the medium-term outlook for the Eurozone industry has become brighter, there is no immediate reason for short-term optimism as trade with the US settles into a new regime. For the third quarter, this means that manufacturing is unlikely to have contributed positively to GDP growth, keeping expectations for growth very muted.


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Disclaimer: This publication has been prepared by the Economic and Financial Analysis Division of ING Bank N.V. (“ING”) solely for information purposes without regard to any ...

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