• Business
  • Politics
  • Investing
American Investor Club
World News

Europe bulletin: FTSE breaks 10,000, Eurozone inflation falls, Germany manufacturing slumps

by admin January 7, 2026
January 7, 2026

Europe’s markets and politics closed the year on sharply diverging tracks.

Britain’s FTSE 100 powered to a historic milestone as geopolitics turbocharged energy and defence stocks, while the eurozone enjoyed a rare mix of falling inflation and resilient growth.

Germany’s services sector held firm, masking a deepening manufacturing slump.

Meanwhile, Greenland delivered a calm but firm rebuke to US saber-rattling, underscoring the hard limits of power politics in Europe’s northern flank.

Greenland pushes back calmly

Greenland PM Jens-Frederik Nielsen struck a measured tone on Tuesday, brushing aside immediate takeover fears while maintaining firm resolve.

Nielsen drew a sharp distinction between Greenland and Venezuela, a democratic nation with entrenched institutions versus a destabilised state.

He flatly stated that democratic norms and legal frameworks preclude any unilateral US seizure.

Yet beneath Nielsen’s calm rhetoric lies a steelier resolve: Europe rallied around Denmark, with PM Frederiksen warning that military action against a NATO ally would trigger alliance dissolution.

The subtext is unmistakable: Trump’s saber-rattling, however vocal, confronts real geopolitical constraints.

FTSE 100 breaks 10,000

Britain’s blue-chip FTSE 100 smashed through the 10,000-point barrier on Tuesday, posting a record high of 10,057 points on the back of surging energy and defence stocks.

The catalyst was geopolitical; US military intervention in Venezuela triggered a scramble for energy plays and defense names.ames.

Shell and BP climbed 1.3% and 0.8% respectively as crude prices spiked on Venezuela production uncertainty.

Defence heavyweights BAE Systems, Babcock International, and Rolls-Royce each gained 1.8% to 2.4%, banking on heightened global tensions and defense spending momentum.

The broader story? The FTSE’s outperformance masks a tired old market hunting for value.

It beat the S&P 500’s 16.65% gain in 2025 with a 21% rally, capitalising on shifts away from frothy US tech valuations toward dividend-rich mining, banking, and commodities plays.

Eurozone inflation falls, growth holds

Eurozone inflation retreated sharply in December, delivering the ECB’s preferred narrative of a “soft landing” intact.

Germany’s headline rate collapsed to 2.0% from 2.6%, well below economist forecasts of 2.2%, while France eased to 0.7% and Spain to 3.0%.

The culprit: tumbling producer prices, collapsing import costs, and a stronger euro deflating foreign goods.

This disinflationary push signals eurozone-wide headline inflation could dip below 2% when full December figures arrive Wednesday.

Yet here’s the plot twist: growth remains surprisingly resilient.

PMI data showed the bloc posted its strongest quarterly expansion in over two years, with services offsetting manufacturing weakness.

The ECB reads this as near-perfection, no rate cuts needed, no hikes required. Money markets price zero probability of cuts through 2026.

Germany services hold, factories sink

Germany’s services sector ended 2025 with solid growth, logging a PMI of 52.7 in December, its slowest pace in three months but still comfortably above the 50 expansion threshold.

New business growth cooled considerably, the weakest in the current streak, though Asian demand offered modest relief.

Notably, employment rose for the third straight month, with firms trimming work backlogs at the fastest pace since September.

The headline threat: wages and input costs accelerated, squeezing margins, yet companies managed to pass costs onto customers with faster price hikes.

The real story, however, is manufacturing’s collapse.

The composite PMI sank to 51.3 from 51.5, masked by services resilience. Germany’s factories plunged to 47.0 in December, a ten-month low, as export orders cratered.

The post Europe bulletin: FTSE breaks 10,000, Eurozone inflation falls, Germany manufacturing slumps appeared first on Invezz

previous post
Evening digest: Venezuela oil doubts, NVIDIA China gridlock, gold near records
next post
US services growth slows to weakest pace since April as demand and hiring falter

You may also like

Venezuelan oil shipments surge to US ports with...

January 8, 2026

9 House Republicans defy Mike Johnson, join Dems...

January 8, 2026

From Caracas to Nuuk: Maduro raid sparks fresh...

January 8, 2026

GOP lawmaker pushes to free US citizen reportedly...

January 8, 2026

Trump affirms US ‘will always be there for...

January 8, 2026

Al Gore sounds ‘climate crisis’ alarm as Trump...

January 8, 2026

Trump orders US withdrawal from 66 ‘wasteful’ global...

January 8, 2026

‘Irregular’ armed guards aboard Russian shadow tankers alarm...

January 8, 2026

Trump greenlights Russian sanctions bill, paving way for...

January 8, 2026

Cruz demands impeachment of Boasberg and judge who...

January 8, 2026

    No fluff, just substance. Sign up for curated updates designed to keep you ahead.

    Curated guidance for living and investing wisely. Subscribe for expert analysis on finance, wealth management, and the life decisions that matter.

    Name Price24H (%)
    bitcoin
    Bitcoin(BTC)
    $90,920.22
    -0.50%
    ethereum
    Ethereum(ETH)
    $3,115.00
    -1.47%
    tether
    Tether(USDT)
    $1.00
    -0.01%
    ripple
    XRP(XRP)
    $2.14
    -2.70%
    binancecoin
    BNB(BNB)
    $888.18
    -1.21%
    solana
    Solana(SOL)
    $137.59
    1.35%
    usd-coin
    USDC(USDC)
    $1.00
    -0.01%
    staked-ether
    Lido Staked Ether(STETH)
    $3,113.16
    -1.58%
    tron
    TRON(TRX)
    $0.294730
    -1.17%
    dogecoin
    Dogecoin(DOGE)
    $0.141822
    -3.68%
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Copyright © 2026 americaninvestorclub.com | All Rights Reserved


    Back To Top
    American Investor Club
    • Business
    • Politics
    • Investing
    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.