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The euro zone economy showed fresh signs of resilience at the end of 2025, with retail sales outperforming expectations and German industrial activity picking up, according to data released on Friday. Retail sales across the bloc rose 0.2% in November, slightly above forecasts, while annual growth of 2.3% was driven by strong upward revisions to earlier data. Spain continued to outperform peers, while France also posted above-trend growth, even as Germany lagged behind the regional average.

Despite lingering global trade disruptions, the euro zone grew faster in 2025 than many economists had anticipated, suggesting households and businesses are adapting to economic shocks. Analysts noted that inflation hovering around 2% has created a favourable environment, aligning with the European Central Bank’s policy goals. While the ECB has already delivered multiple rate cuts to support growth, economists expect further easing to be limited as the recovery remains modest rather than robust.

Germany’s industrial sector offered cautious optimism, with output rising 0.8% month-on-month and industrial orders surging 5.6%, boosted by large contracts. Government plans to ramp up spending on defence, infrastructure and housing are expected to further lift confidence and growth into 2026. However, exports remain a weak spot, particularly shipments to the United States, which fell sharply after new tariffs were imposed, dragging German exports down by 2.5% in November and reducing the country’s trade surplus.

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Manufacturing activity in the euro zone weakened further in December, ending 2025 in deeper contraction as demand faltered and new orders declined, private surveys showed. The HCOB Eurozone Manufacturing PMI fell to 48.8 from 49.6 in November, its lowest level in nine months and below the 50 mark separating growth from contraction for a second consecutive month. Germany recorded the weakest performance among major economies, while Italy and Spain also slipped back into contraction, highlighting broad-based weakness across the region.

France offered a rare bright spot, with its manufacturing PMI rising to a 42-month high, while Britain saw factory activity expand at its fastest pace in 15 months, supported by a recovery in demand. Economists warned, however, that euro zone manufacturers remain cautious heading into 2026, as slowing demand and subdued confidence continue to weigh on output and investment.

In contrast, Asia’s factory powerhouses closed the year on a stronger footing, supported by a rebound in exports and rising demand for artificial intelligence-related products. Manufacturing activity in Taiwan and South Korea returned to expansion territory in December after months of decline, driven by a surge in new orders. Most Southeast Asian economies maintained solid growth, while China also showed signs of an unexpected turnaround, reinforcing optimism that Asia’s export-driven manufacturing sector may start the new year with renewed momentum.

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