The eurozone business climate indicator moved down in April. It fell to -0.28 from -0.27 in the previous reading.
The slight dip in the Eurozone business climate to -0.28 shows that confidence remains weak. While this is not a major drop, it confirms the pessimistic trend we have been tracking for the last two quarters. This suggests businesses are still hesitant to invest, which could weigh on economic growth in the coming months.
Eurozone Data Signals Ongoing Weakness
We see this weak sentiment reflected in other recent figures, as the latest S&P Global Eurozone Composite PMI printed just below the neutral 50-mark at 49.8. At the same time, inflation remains sticky at around 2.6%, making it difficult for the European Central Bank to stimulate the economy. This data continues the weak trend we saw emerge in the second half of 2025, where manufacturing orders first began to soften.
For those trading equity index derivatives like Euro Stoxx 50 futures, we should maintain a cautious to bearish stance. The weak business outlook could put pressure on corporate earnings expectations for the rest of the year. Buying put options could be a prudent way to hedge existing long positions or speculate on a further downturn.
The current environment of uncertainty suggests that market volatility may be undervalued. We are looking at options on the VSTOXX, as it has been trading at relatively low levels compared to its historical average during periods of economic stress. Buying calls on this volatility index could be an effective play on rising market anxiety.
This economic picture is also likely negative for the euro currency. A dovish ECB, constrained by weak growth, puts downward pressure on the EUR/USD exchange rate. We can use options to position for this, perhaps by buying EUR/USD put spreads to target a move lower in a cost-effective way.