Eurozone business growth is roaring ahead as the year draws to a close, surveys showed on Thursday, supporting the European Central Bank's move last month to announce a throttling back of its monetary stimulus. Surveys covering both the services and manufacturing industries outshone even the most optimistic forecasters in Reuters polls - indicating growth is broad-based - with factories having the second-best month in the index's history.
An earlier sister survey from Germany showed Europe's largest economy shifted into an even higher gear in November as factories churned out goods at the fastest pace in nearly seven years. France's equivalent confounded economists' expectations for a slowdown and activity grew at the fastest pace in 6-1/2 years this month as recent labour reforms pushed firms to add staff quicker than at any time since 2001.
The currency bloc has emerged as the surprise economic star of 2017, with growth rates outpacing its peers, and future-looking indicators in the latest Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) suggest the upturn still has momentum. IHS Markit's composite flash PMI for the eurozone jumped to 57.5 this month, its highest since April 2011 and smashing the median forecast in a Reuters poll for no change from a final October reading of 56.0. Anything above 50 indicates growth.
"All in all, there are no signs of stopping the euro zone economy at the moment and 2018 is likely to start on a strong footing," said Bert Colijn at ING. "With continued monetary support and some expected improvements in global growth in 2018, the euro zone economy is set for another year of surprising growth." December looks like it will be busy, too. A new business index rose to 56.9 from 56.6, a near seven-year high and so IHS Markit said the PMI, if maintained, points to fourth quarter growth of 0.8 percent, outstripping the 0.5 percent predicted in a Reuters poll earlier this month.
Britain's overall economic growth sped up moderately in the third quarter but was only a tepid 0.4 percent, official figures showed on Thursday, as households increased the pace of spending but business investment grew more slowly, suggesting caution among companies ahead of Brexit. In contrast, rising business investments, alongside exports, were the main drivers of growth for the German economy last quarter, data showed on Thursday, signalling the robust upswing will extend well into next year.
Accelerating growth in the euro zone, alongside increasing price pressures, will be welcomed by policymakers at the ECB who last month took a step towards weaning the euro zone off loose money. "Today's data make it easy for the ECB to justify its forced reduction of the bond buying programme in 2018," said Christoph Weil at Commerzbank. A PMI covering the bloc's dominant service industry also beat all expectations in a Reuters poll, rising from October's 55.0 to a six-month high of 56.2 and comfortably above the median forecast for a very modest increase to 55.1.
Implying a busy end to the year, service firms built up backlogs of work at the fastest rate since May 2011, with the sub-index up from 52.9 to 53.3, pushing them to increase headcount at the fastest rate in almost 10 years. Manufacturers also had a much better month than anyone polled expected. Their PMI climbed to 60.0 from 58.5, the second-highest reading since the index was first collected in June 1997 and only surpassed in April 2000. An index measuring output, which feeds into the composite PMI, jumped to a near seven-year high of 60.8 from 58.8.
With new orders coming in at the fastest rate since April 2011, factories built up backlogs of work and stockpiled raw materials. Yet despite jacking up employment at the fastest rate in the survey's more than 20-year history, with the subindex rising to 57.9 from 57.3, delivery times grew.