Eurozone Publications
Below is a list of our Eurozone Publications for the last 5 months. If you are looking for reports older than 5 months please email info@pantheonmacro.com, or contact your account rep
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Claus Vistesen (Chief Eurozone Economist) Gabriella Dickens Freya Beamish (Chief Asia Economist) 
- EZ industrial production fell in April, as goods exports retreated.
- The increase in tariff rates in April hurt exports, but the main hit came from fading tariff front-running.
- The risks to our calls for net trade and GDP in Q2 are to the downside.
 
- A drop in EZ headline inflation to 2.0% in May should be enough to pull a 25bp ECB rate cut over the line.
- The ECB’s 2026 HICP forecasts likely will determine whether doves get rates cut to 1.75% over summer.
- German retail sales fell in April, but the upturn in EZ real M1 growth accelerated further.
 
- EZ GDP was propelled higher in Q1 on the back of an upwardly revised Irish GDP figure...
- ...This was, in turn, down to tariff front-running practices, which will almost surely reverse in Q2.
- We are cutting our forecast for EZ Q2 GDP, but the strength in Q1 means our 2025 call is still up a tad.
 
In one line: Surprisingly strong, but the details are volatile.
 
- The ECB cut the deposit rate by 25bp to 2.0%, as expected, but Ms. Lagarde signalled this is it. 
- We still see a final 25bp cut, to 1.75%—now in September—but we’re less certain than before. 
- The ECB’s new forecasts are very dovish on inflation and likely will have to be revised up in due course.
 
In one line: All set for doves to take charge of ECB policy over the summer.
 
- EZ sovereigns have been largely spared in the global bond-market rout, but French bonds remain fragile. 
- Foreigners own more than half of government bonds in France, with Japanese savings a key swing factor. 
- We think Japan owns around €165B-worth of French government bonds, or 5% of French GDP.
 
- Inflation in both the EZ and Switzerland fell below the respective central-bank targets in May. 
- In the EZ, the decline solidifies the need for a rate cut this month, and we look for another one in Q3.
- In Switzerland, deflation is likely to become a mainstay, so brace for a 50bp rate cut from the SNB.
 
In one line: Upturn in money supply continues; Italian GDP on a solid footing in Q1.
 
In one line: Strong, but remember difference in base effects in the CPI and HICP. 
 
In one line: Consumption growth will slow in Q2. 
 
A TENSE MONTH OF EU-US TRADE NEGOTIATIONS LIES AHEAD...
- ...WE STILL SEE UNCERTAINTY WEIGHING ON GROWTH