UPDATE 2-Euro zone economic confidence plunges, price pressures soar

"Services firms' selling price expectations rose further but not enough for the ECB to take action at its meeting tomorrow." The drop ​in consumer confidence was driven by a deterioration in consumers' views on their households' past and future financial situation, their intentions to make major purchases, ⁠and their expectations about the general economic outlook, the Commission said. Euro zone inflation data, due on Thursday, is expected to show an increase to 2.9% this month from 2.6% in March and regional ⁠data ​from Spain and several key German states on Wednesday appear consistent with this projection.


Reuters | Updated: 29-04-2026 16:06 IST | Created: 29-04-2026 16:06 IST
UPDATE 2-Euro zone economic confidence plunges, price pressures soar

Euro ​zone economic sentiment plunged to a three-and-a-half-year low this ‌month ​as the Iran war hit the services sector hard and inflation continued to rise, even as lending figures showed modest signs of resilience, a raft of data showed on Wednesday.

The euro zone economy has been hit hard ‌from the fallout of the war and a raft of surveys this week are offering some early glimpses into just how bad the 21-nation currency bloc may be hit. The figures point to surging prices and plunging economic growth, a dilemma for the European Central Bank as it is keen to arrest inflation but any ‌policy tightening is bound to hurt already fragile growth.

The European Commission Economic Sentiment Indicator fell to 93.0 this month from 96.6 a month earlier, coming ‌well below expectations as the services component plunged to a five-year low. "The decline of the Economic Sentiment Indicator was driven by plummeting confidence among consumers, as well as managers in services and retail trade," the European Commission said. "Services confidence declined by a lot, reflecting managers' more negative assessments across all ... components."

INFLATION SOARS BUT ECB ON HOLD FOR NOW Selling price expectations meanwhile soared, ⁠after an already ​steep increase in the previous month, ⁠indicating that firms anticipate continued acceleration in overall inflation given high energy costs and possible supply shortages.

"April's EC survey suggests the Iran war may hit euro zone activity a bit harder than ⁠we are forecasting," Franziska Palmas at Capital Economics said. "Services firms' selling price expectations rose further but not enough for the ECB to take action at its meeting tomorrow." The drop ​in consumer confidence was driven by a deterioration in consumers' views on their households' past and future financial situation, their intentions to make major purchases, ⁠and their expectations about the general economic outlook, the Commission said.

Euro zone inflation data, due on Thursday, is expected to show an increase to 2.9% this month from 2.6% in March and regional ⁠data ​from Spain and several key German states on Wednesday appear consistent with this projection. This figure is not high enough for the ECB to raise interest rates on Thursday but will put the bank on high alert and policymakers are likely to keep a June rate hike squarely on the ⁠table.

In a modestly hopeful sign for economic growth, separate data showed that credit growth to businesses accelerated to 3.2% in March month from 3.0% a month ⁠earlier, despite banks warning that credit growth ⁠is likely to fall off a cliff given the war. Still, lending volumes are likely to fall in subsequent months and credit standards will tighten, given increased funding costs and uncertainty.

Lending is also seen taking a hit as ‌inflation is accelerating on higher ‌energy costs, quickly hitting corporate margins and households' disposable incomes.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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