Euro zone business activity at three-year high

Data will come as a relief to the ECB which has so far shrugged off calls for extra stimulus

The Euro zone PMI data will come as a relief to the European Central Bank, which has so far shrugged off calls for extra stimulus. Photo: Bloomberg
The Euro zone PMI data will come as a relief to the European Central Bank, which has so far shrugged off calls for extra stimulus. Photo: Bloomberg

Euro zone businesses had a solid start to the second quarter of the year with activity picking up at its fastest pace in almost three years, surveys showed on Tuesday, suggesting a broad-based recovery is taking hold in the bloc.

While Germany continued to lead the upturn, businesses in Spain and Ireland grew at their fastest pace since before the financial crisis.

Survey compiler Markit said the Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) pointed to second-quarter growth of 0.5 per cent, which would be the strongest in three years.

The data will come as a relief to the European Central Bank, which has so far shrugged off calls for extra stimulus through another interest rate cut or outright asset purchases.

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The Composite PMI, widely seen as a good gauge of growth, rose to 54.0 in April, as expected by economists, from March’s 53.1. It has held above the 50 mark that divides growth from contraction for 10 months in a row.

Burgeoning new orders provided the boost, with the related sub-index rising to a 35-month high of 52.7 in April, while firms took on staff at the fastest pace since September 2011.

"The final PMI confirms ... the euro zone started the second quarter with the fastest growth seen for three years," said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit.

“The most exciting news is the strong upturns that are becoming apparent in Spain and Ireland, where the rates of growth rose to the fastest for seven and eight years respectively.”

Price rises remained muted, although the survey showed a slight acceleration in input cost rises which, coupled with the accelerating recovery, may ease concerns about disinflation.

The index for the euro zone’s vast service industry rose to a 34-month high of 53.1 in April from 52.2 in March thanks to a surge in new business to its highest since June 2011 and a slight rise in employment.

Services business activity in France, Germany, Italy, Ireland and Spain all grew together for the first time since May 2011.

Reuters