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Economy & MarketsMonday, June 15, 2026

Eurozone Trade Slides into Deficit as Global Factory Output Stalls

A surprise eurozone trade gap, tepid US industrial growth, and a shrinking Russian current account surplus signal mounting strains on the world economy.

The eurozone’s trade balance lurched into deficit in April, a stark reversal from a healthy surplus a year earlier that underscores the bloc’s vulnerability to energy costs and shifting global demand. Unadjusted data showed a shortfall of €1.0 billion, compared with a surplus of €8.7 billion in April 2025, as imports surged 9.3 percent year-on-year while exports rose just 5 percent. Viewed from Brussels, the deterioration was driven by a widening energy deficit and a shrinking surplus in machinery and vehicles. On a seasonally adjusted basis the picture was less dire — a modest surplus of €1.3 billion, up from €600 million in March — but the annual swing of nearly €10 billion in the raw figures has focused minds among policymakers already grappling with the inflationary fallout of Middle East tensions.

Across the Atlantic, American industry also lost momentum in May. The Federal Reserve reported that overall production edged up just 0.1 percent, half the consensus forecast, after a robust 0.9 percent gain in April. Manufacturing output, which accounts for more than three-quarters of the index, was flat, disappointing expectations of a 0.2 percent rise. Mining and energy extraction provided a bright spot with a 1.3 percent increase, while utilities output fell 0.4 percent. Capacity utilisation ticked up to 76.2 percent, in line with forecasts, but the broader picture from Washington is one of an expansion that is running out of steam as higher borrowing costs and global uncertainty weigh on factory orders.

Industrial production inside the eurozone offered little comfort. Output in April rose just 0.1 percent month-on-month, below the 0.2 percent consensus, even as March was revised up to 0.4 percent. The annual gain was a meagre 0.3 percent. Analysts in London note that the modest uptick was partly flattered by firms rushing to secure orders ahead of feared price spikes and supply disruptions linked to the conflict in the Middle East. That same energy shock, however, is expected to sap activity in the coming months, casting a shadow over second-quarter growth prospects for the currency union.

Moscow’s external accounts are telling a parallel story of gradual erosion. Russia’s current account surplus for January to April 2026 narrowed to $20.1 billion, down 4.3 percent from the same period a year earlier, as a growing deficit in services offset merchandise trade gains. The April surplus alone fell to $6.7 billion, a drop of more than a third from March, though it was still more than double the depressed level of April 2025. The central bank attributed the year-on-year improvement largely to higher export revenues, but the sequential decline highlights how volatile commodity flows and sanctions-era adjustments continue to cloud the outlook.

Taken together, the data paint a picture of a global economy confronting multiple headwinds. The eurozone’s trade reversal, sluggish factory output on both sides of the Atlantic, and a narrowing Russian surplus all point to an environment where geopolitical risk, energy price volatility, and softening demand are beginning to bite. Forward-looking indicators suggest that the Middle East conflict’s disruptive potential has yet to be fully felt, and policymakers from Frankfurt to Washington will be watching incoming orders and energy markets nervously as the second half of the year approaches.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

44%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Continental European pressLatin American press
Continental European press/ Mediterranean
PragmatismDetachment

Italian exports rose 8.8% year-on-year in April, with extra-EU sales surging 12%, signaling robust external demand. Despite a monthly dip, the annual performance highlights the country's trade strength amid a fragile global industrial picture.

Latin American press/ Market
SkepticismAlarm

The eurozone swung to a €1 billion trade deficit in April, a sharp reversal from last year's surplus, as imports surged 9.3%. Industrial production edged up just 0.1%, missing forecasts, with the meager gain linked to advance orders driven by Middle East conflict risks, exposing the bloc's fragile balance.

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Upd. 11:28 PM3 languages · 4 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
4 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Monday, June 15, 2026

Eurozone Trade Slides into Deficit as Global Factory Output Stalls

A surprise eurozone trade gap, tepid US industrial growth, and a shrinking Russian current account surplus signal mounting strains on the world economy.

The eurozone’s trade balance lurched into deficit in April, a stark reversal from a healthy surplus a year earlier that underscores the bloc’s vulnerability to energy costs and shifting global demand. Unadjusted data showed a shortfall of €1.0 billion, compared with a surplus of €8.7 billion in April 2025, as imports surged 9.3 percent year-on-year while exports rose just 5 percent. Viewed from Brussels, the deterioration was driven by a widening energy deficit and a shrinking surplus in machinery and vehicles. On a seasonally adjusted basis the picture was less dire — a modest surplus of €1.3 billion, up from €600 million in March — but the annual swing of nearly €10 billion in the raw figures has focused minds among policymakers already grappling with the inflationary fallout of Middle East tensions.

Across the Atlantic, American industry also lost momentum in May. The Federal Reserve reported that overall production edged up just 0.1 percent, half the consensus forecast, after a robust 0.9 percent gain in April. Manufacturing output, which accounts for more than three-quarters of the index, was flat, disappointing expectations of a 0.2 percent rise. Mining and energy extraction provided a bright spot with a 1.3 percent increase, while utilities output fell 0.4 percent. Capacity utilisation ticked up to 76.2 percent, in line with forecasts, but the broader picture from Washington is one of an expansion that is running out of steam as higher borrowing costs and global uncertainty weigh on factory orders.

Industrial production inside the eurozone offered little comfort. Output in April rose just 0.1 percent month-on-month, below the 0.2 percent consensus, even as March was revised up to 0.4 percent. The annual gain was a meagre 0.3 percent. Analysts in London note that the modest uptick was partly flattered by firms rushing to secure orders ahead of feared price spikes and supply disruptions linked to the conflict in the Middle East. That same energy shock, however, is expected to sap activity in the coming months, casting a shadow over second-quarter growth prospects for the currency union.

Moscow’s external accounts are telling a parallel story of gradual erosion. Russia’s current account surplus for January to April 2026 narrowed to $20.1 billion, down 4.3 percent from the same period a year earlier, as a growing deficit in services offset merchandise trade gains. The April surplus alone fell to $6.7 billion, a drop of more than a third from March, though it was still more than double the depressed level of April 2025. The central bank attributed the year-on-year improvement largely to higher export revenues, but the sequential decline highlights how volatile commodity flows and sanctions-era adjustments continue to cloud the outlook.

Taken together, the data paint a picture of a global economy confronting multiple headwinds. The eurozone’s trade reversal, sluggish factory output on both sides of the Atlantic, and a narrowing Russian surplus all point to an environment where geopolitical risk, energy price volatility, and softening demand are beginning to bite. Forward-looking indicators suggest that the Middle East conflict’s disruptive potential has yet to be fully felt, and policymakers from Frankfurt to Washington will be watching incoming orders and energy markets nervously as the second half of the year approaches.

Source divergence

Economy & Markets · 4 outlets · 3 languages

44%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable33%
Neutral67%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Continental European pressLatin American press
Continental European press/ Mediterranean
PragmatismDetachment

Italian exports rose 8.8% year-on-year in April, with extra-EU sales surging 12%, signaling robust external demand. Despite a monthly dip, the annual performance highlights the country's trade strength amid a fragile global industrial picture.

Latin American press/ Market
SkepticismAlarm

The eurozone swung to a €1 billion trade deficit in April, a sharp reversal from last year's surplus, as imports surged 9.3%. Industrial production edged up just 0.1%, missing forecasts, with the meager gain linked to advance orders driven by Middle East conflict risks, exposing the bloc's fragile balance.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 3 languages

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