The HCOB Eurozone Composite PMI came in at 47.5 in May. This was below the forecast of 48.8.
A reading below 50 indicates overall business activity is contracting. The May result therefore points to a continued decline in activity across the eurozone.
Market Reaction And Macro Signal
This May 2025 purchasing managers’ index reading is a significant negative surprise for the market. It shows the Eurozone economy is contracting faster than we anticipated, suggesting a deeper slowdown is underway. This immediately creates a bearish outlook for European assets in the near term.
The data significantly increases the probability of an earlier interest rate cut by the European Central Bank. With Eurozone inflation having stabilized at 2.4% in April 2025, this clear sign of economic weakness gives the ECB a strong reason to act to stimulate growth. We should now position for a more dovish central bank stance through the summer.
Given the prospect of lower interest rates, we should anticipate the Euro to weaken against the US dollar. A sensible response is to consider buying put options on the EUR/USD pair or selling EUR futures. This strategy will profit as the interest rate differential between the Eurozone and the U.S. widens.
For equity markets, this report signals trouble for corporate earnings, making indices like the Euro Stoxx 50 look vulnerable. After a rally in the first quarter of 2025, the index is ripe for a pullback on this news. Buying put options on the index provides a direct way to hedge against or profit from this expected decline.
This unexpected data will almost certainly increase market volatility. The VSTOXX, which measures Euro Stoxx 50 volatility, is likely to rise from its current levels. We can capitalize on this by purchasing call options or futures on the VSTOXX index itself.
Positioning And Risk Management
This weakness isn’t a shock when we consider the underlying fragility we saw in late 2024, especially from the bloc’s largest economy. Germany’s IFO business climate index, for instance, had shown a weak recovery in early 2025 after a period of stagnation. This PMI reading confirms that the regional weakness is broader and more pronounced than believed.