According to the February 2026 Euro indicators data, euro area GDP expanded by just 0.3% in the fourth quarter, matching the previous quarter and underscoring a persistent low-growth environment across the bloc.
Year-over-year growth is hovering around roughly 1.3%, which is hardly a recovery when you consider the massive fiscal expansion, energy disruptions, and regulatory overreach imposed across the EU in recent years. This is exactly the type of sluggish cyclical performance that aligns with a declining confidence model in government policy rather than a normal business cycle expansion.
At the same time, inflation has fallen to 1.7% in January 2026, down from 2.0% in December, with energy prices still contracting and services remaining the primary source of price pressure. On the surface, bureaucrats in Brussels and the ECB will celebrate this as a victory over inflation. But this is where mainstream economics consistently gets it wrong. Disinflation alongside stagnant growth is not true strength.
Services inflation remains elevated while energy prices are negative year-over-year. That reflects structural distortions created by EU energy policy, sanctions, and the forced transition toward Net Zero, which I have repeatedly warned would crush industrial competitiveness across Germany, France, and the broader eurozone. You cannot deindustrialize an economy and then pretend weak inflation is a sign of stability.
Growth is being driven disproportionately by a handful of economies, such as Spain, while core economies like Germany and France remain structurally weak and politically unstable. A monetary union with a one-size-fits-all policy always produces divergence. Strong regions survive; weaker ones stagnate under a centralized monetary policy they cannot control.
From a capital flow perspective, this data reinforces the broader trend we are tracking into the 2026 ECM window. Capital chases stability. When growth is stuck at 0.3% quarterly and inflation is falling below target, global capital begins to question long-term stability. That is precisely how slow capital flight begins.
The ECB is now trapped. With inflation falling below target and growth barely positive, they cannot justify aggressive tightening, yet easing risks further currency instability and capital outflows. This is the classic sovereign debt-cycle dilemma I outlined in Manipulating the World Economy. Central banks do not control the economy; rather, they react to it, and usually too late.
What we are witnessing is not a recovery. The ECM has long projected rising volatility into 2026, and Europe’s data is lining up perfectly with that model.
