اب سے ہم Elev8 ہیں
ہم صرف ایک بروکر نہیں ہیں۔ ہم ایک جامع ٹریڈنگ ایکوسسٹم ہیں—ہر چیز جو آپ کو تجزیے، ٹریڈ اور ترقی کے لیے درکار ہو، ایک ہی جگہ پر ہے۔ کیا آپ اپنی ٹریڈنگ کو بلند کرنے کے لیے تیار ہیں؟
ہم صرف ایک بروکر نہیں ہیں۔ ہم ایک جامع ٹریڈنگ ایکوسسٹم ہیں—ہر چیز جو آپ کو تجزیے، ٹریڈ اور ترقی کے لیے درکار ہو، ایک ہی جگہ پر ہے۔ کیا آپ اپنی ٹریڈنگ کو بلند کرنے کے لیے تیار ہیں؟
Danske Bank economists Sofie Grundvad Pedersen and Rune Thyge Johansen note that Euro area GDP grew 0.3% q/q in Q4 2025, slightly above ECB projections, driven by Germany, Spain and Italy. They highlight mixed early‑2026 signals from PMIs, weak services inflation, and project headline and core inflation below 2% in 2026–2027, with decent growth and stable ECB policy at 2.0%.
"The final quarter of 2025 concluded on a strong note, with GDP growth at 0.3% q/q, exceeding ECB staff projections of 0.2%. The growth surprise was driven by stronger-than-expected performance in Germany, Spain, and Italy, while France grew as anticipated, albeit modestly. Private consumption played a key role in driving Q4 growth, which was broad-based across the eurozone."
"This supports the ECB's assessment that the economy is in a “good place.” However, as 2026 begins, more recent indicators suggest mixed signals for the economy."
"The composite PMI declined slightly to 51.3 in January from 51.5 thereby still signalling a modest expansion. While the PMIs surprised to the downside, recent months have seen significant volatility."
"Headline inflation in January fell to 1.7% y/y, below the ECB 2%-target, from 2.0% in December. This was largely driven by energy inflation, which declined sharply to -4.1% y/y from -2.1%, reflecting a significant base effect."
"These factors make it difficult to draw firm conclusions from the January inflation print, but we do read it as a weak print due to services."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)