Germany is planning significant fiscal stimulus via infrastructure and defense spending. However, as a highly trade-open economy, the positive domestic impact could be largely offset by headwinds from a slowing China and potential U.S. tariffs. This limits its ability to meaningfully boost overall European growth.
Contrary to the belief that US strength harms the Euro, historical data shows the EUR/USD pair performs best when growth outlooks for *both* regions are being upgraded. This is because the Euro is fundamentally a pro-cyclical 'growth currency,' benefiting from a global risk-on environment even when the US also thrives.
The tariff war was not primarily about revenue but a strategic move to create an "artificial negotiating point." By imposing tariffs, the U.S. could then offer reductions in exchange for European countries committing to American technology and supply chains over China's growing, low-cost alternatives.
Despite a sizable fiscal boost, Germany is not expected to experience rising term premium. The country's debt-to-GDP ratio remains low, and strong demand from the private sector and foreign investors is forecast to easily absorb the increased bond supply, containing upward pressure on yields.
While the idea of US growth re-acceleration is driving dollar strength, it's not the only story. Recent positive surprises in European PMI data and upgraded Chinese GDP forecasts suggest broader global growth resilience. This breadth should help cap the US dollar's rally and may promote weakness against other currencies.
While gross Euro area sovereign bond issuance is set for a new record in 2026, this is primarily driven by Germany. Net issuance for the region will remain similar to 2025 levels, as deficits in other countries are flat or declining, mitigating overall supply pressure.
Germany's finance agency signaled it would adjust debt issuance in response to a steepening yield curve. This sensitivity acts as a structural anchor on intermediate-term yields, creating a potential outperformance opportunity for German bonds versus US and UK debt, which face greater fiscal pressures.
While the upcoming 2026 German/EU fiscal stimulus is expected to boost industrial demand, the benefits won't materialize immediately. The key investment strategy is identifying companies with the cash flow and balance sheet strength to survive the interim period before the stimulus-led recovery begins.
A persistent headwind for European markets is the dual impact of rising Chinese competition and weak demand from China. For the past several years, this single factor has been responsible for a staggering 60% to 90% of all earnings downgrades across the European index, particularly hitting sectors like chemicals and autos.
Facing significant US tariffs and global trade headwinds, India is pivoting inward. The government is implementing a three-pronged stimulus—cutting household taxes, central bank interest rates, and consumption taxes—to boost domestic demand and insulate its economy from external shocks.
According to IMF data analysis, China's manufacturing surplus as a share of its GDP has surpassed 2%, exceeding the levels of Japan and Germany during their most dominant export eras. This indicates China is achieving global manufacturing dominance at a scale and speed that is historically unprecedented, fundamentally altering global trade dynamics.