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In June 2026, Germany sends two simultaneous contraction signals that markets can no longer ignore: overall activity at its lowest in 18 months and a services sector collapsed to its weakest level in 43 months-unseen since the post-Ukraine energy crisis.
The June 2026 flash PMIs, released on June 23, confirm a synchronized downturn in the German economy. Overall activity hits an 18-month low; the services sector reaches its lowest level in 43 months-since November 2022, during the post-Ukraine energy crisis. In contrast, France posts a composite PMI slightly above forecasts, outlining an unprecedented North-South divergence in the eurozone.
The German services sector collapses to a level only seen during major exogenous shocks. This signal is structural: Germany is undergoing a triple transition simultaneously-phasing out Russian gas, automotive shift (combustion → electric), and fiscal rearmament-without the necessary fiscal leeway. Its export-driven model, weakened by Chinese competition, is also deprived of domestic demand. France, less exposed to heavy industry and supported by services (tourism, tech, luxury), offers a relative counterexample-but remains in contraction territory.
Underweight German cyclicals (DAX industrials, automotive). Opportunity in 5-10 year European government bonds if the ECB pivots. The France/Germany divergence opens a pair trade: French service stocks (LVMH, Airbus) vs. German industrials (BMW, Siemens).
Flash PMIs are preliminary-revisions possible in early July. The Iran deal could lower gas prices faster than expected, partially softening the negative signal ahead of the next ECB meeting.
Germany’s final PMI (early July 2026) · ECB meeting and pivot signals · Germany’s IFO Business Climate Index
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