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
Please use the filters on the right to search for a specific date or topic.
- A firm commitment from Germany to spend 5% of GDP on defence would be a rug-pull for Bunds.
 
- Rising investor sentiment and calmness on the trade front point to decent June survey data this week.
 
- Early-Q2 data indicate upside risk to GDP growth in France, but we still look for just 0.1% q/q.
 
 
In one line: We were wrong; SNB opts for another small cut.
 
In one line:  A September cut is still on, but the ECB will end up regretting it. 
 
- The SNB shied away from a jumbo cut, opting for a 25bp reduction for its sixth straight policy rate cut. 
 
- The policy rate is now at zero; we doubt the SNB can avoid negative rates for long… 
 
- ...We now expect another 25bp cut in September but think the SNB will be back hiking next year.
 
 
- The EZ current account surplus crashed in April, pulled lower by net trade in goods and services. 
 
- Portfolio in- and outflows in the Eurozone remain strong, but both are now likely peaking. 
 
- Final EZ HICP data leave intact yesterday’s forecast update, save for a small revision to inflation in 2025.
 
 
In one line:  Investor sentiment continues to rise. 
 
- Inflation in the EZ will settle at 2.0% over the summer, with the core also hitting 2% by August… 
 
- …This should be enough for a final 25bp ECB rate cut in September, to 1.75%, setting up hikes next year. 
 
- We’re lowering our inflation forecasts for 2026, but we’re still well above the ECB’s June projections.
 
 
In one line: Tariff-front running boost to industry and trade fading in early Q2. 
 
In one line: Energy and services pull headline down. 
 
In one line: Stable, in line with advance release. 
 
- The SNB is sure to ease this Thursday, and more analysts have joined us in expecting a sub-zero rate.
 
- Strength in EURUSD is supported by leading indicators, but the recent rally will fade soon.
 
- Disinflation in core goods from EURUSD at 1.15 is trivial, despite the ECB’s stringent forecast rules.
 
 
- 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.
 
 
- Post-meeting comments from ECB Council members are mixed, but do not rule out another cut. 
 
- Markets, like us, look for one more rate cut—in September—but it will be a close call. 
 
- The ECB’s wage tracker eased in Q1, in line with other measures; wage growth will remain high.
 
 
In one line: A one-year high.
 
- Investor sentiment rose in June, signalling a rebound in the EZ composite PMI after two straight declines. 
 
- Advance hard data suggest that GDP growth will slow regardless… 
 
- ...We continue to look for EZ GDP to stagnate this quarter, after the 0.6% q/q rise in Q1.
 
 
- The BTP-Bund spread has held broadly steady at around 100bp so far this year. 
 
- We still see scope for further narrowing in 2025, to 70bp, implying BTPs trading inside OATs in France. 
 
- Risks are broadly balanced, with German stimulus a downside and further trade uncertainty an upside.
 
 
- EZ compensation per employee growth slowed in Q1, in line with easing negotiated wage growth. 
 
- Other measures out in the coming days are likely to also show slower wage growth in Q1. 
 
- We suspect wage growth will now plateau in the 2.5%-to-3.0% range, remaining historically high.
 
 
In one line: Fastest growth in eleven quarters thanks to tariff-front-running-led jump in Irish GDP.
 
- 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.