A 2-Speed Europe Puts The EUR...Where?

 | May 15, 2014 07:27AM ET

Presently, all news and data is going against the EUR. European growth remains very mixed with the word "contraction" being uttered more often than policy makers would like. Data released this morning indicates that the euro-zone's economy expanded at a surprisingly low pace last quarter despite a strong recovery in Germany. Other key euro members either stalled or contracted.

Gross domestic product grew at +0.2% in Q1, well short of the +0.4% that was forecasted. In annualized terms that's a meager +0.8% growth rate. The morning's results indicate that the Euro regions growth remains both tepid and vulnerable, with many of the economies on a widely opposing growth path. For instance, France's economy is stalling; Italy's contracting slightly, while Portugal fell back into contraction after three positive quarters (-0.7%), similar to the Netherlands who posted a sharp drop in output (-1.4%). There are no real surprises with the Euro-zones largest and most dominant economy, Germany. It's GDP swelled +0.8% from the previous quarter or +3% y/y. Both consumer and government spending are the driving force behind its growth. Unlike France, its economy has stalled on the back of consumer spending and investment declining.