Daily Brief – Eurozone Growth

Humphrey Percy
Chairman and Founder
Wed 17 Dec 2025

Eurozone Growth

Those productive Germans have for the second month been less productive it turns out in December which was a surprise to the pointy heads deputed to monitor EU stats. The story is as follows: the German services sector remains relatively resilient but manufacturing output has declined. At present the French economy is doing the opposite of Germany’s by surprising on the upside in the manufacturing sector but there are storm clouds approaching for France’s economy due to the lack of a functioning government and the fear of resurgent inflation. What that adds up to is that slowing growth in the two main Eurozone industrial economic engines is threatening to slow the whole EU growth picture. However, the EUR/USD remains at this point at least, strong.

EUR/USD 1.1775.

China Growth

In addition to EU growth being under threat, it would look as if China’s economic growth is also slowing despite strong manufacturing figures. Retail sales growth for November has slumped to 1.3% from 2.9% a month earlier in October. This is largely due to the expiry of the new for old policy engineered by the Chinese government which administered a significant jolt to China’s beating economic heart. That meant that consumers could trade in old goods for new ones and snag a discount. To illustrate that, sales of household appliances fell almost 20% from the stats a year earlier at the height of the new for old policy. What these figures suggest is that manufacturing output is an outlier and the slowdown in China is both broad and deeper than previously envisaged.

GBP/USD 1.3420.

Flying Home for Christmas

In case you have not clocked it, Italy, Spain, and the UK are all bracing themselves for Christmas strikes as lower paid airport workers express their dissatisfaction with their pay. Airports at Rome, Milan, Catania, Venice and Naples in Italy plus Madrid, Barcelona, Malaga, Seville, Girona, Alicante, Tenerife, Ibiza, Mallorca and Valencia in Spain, and Luton and Heathrow in the UK are all expecting disruption. For good measure Stockholm, Copenhagen, and Oslo are also joining in. So flying home for Christmas looks like it’s going to be a whole lot harder this year.

GBP/EUR 1.1390.

Welsh Gold

A Cardiff Wales couple have won the Lottery for the second time in odds that are reported to be 24 trillion to one. Unlike other less deserving winners, they spent much of their first GBP 1 million win on supporting charitable causes and giving their time to working in the charity sector, including working in a shelter for homeless people. Now they have won a second GBP 1 million and right-thinking people are delighted for them.

EUR/JPY 182.36.

Oh What a Night

This day in 1994 a remixed version of The Four Seasons’ Oh What a Night entered the US charts where it stayed for almost 6 months. That was 31 years on from when the song first charted for Franki Valli and the lads in 1963. The combination of the two runs made it the longest charting song ever-remember that one for that Christmas pub quiz question.

Oh, what a night
Late December, back in ’63
What a very special time for me
As I remember, what a night

Oh, what a night
You know, I didn’t even know her name
But I was never gonna be the same
What a lady, what a night

Oh, I
I got a funny feeling when she walked in the room
Hey, my
As I recall, it ended much too soon

Oh, what a night
Hypnotizing, mesmerizing me
She was everything I dreamed she’d be
Sweet surrender, what a night

And I felt a rush like a rolling bolt of thunder
Spinning my head around and taking my body under
Oh, what a night

Discussion and Analysis by Humphrey Percy, Chairman and Founder

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