
Germany's Third Quarter Economy Confirmed Stagnant, Structural Weakness Exposed
The latest data released by the German Federal Statistical Office confirms that Europe’s largest economy made no substantial growth in the third quarter of 2025, with the quarter-on-quarter growth rate remaining at 0%. Although this result aligns with market expectations, it highlights once again the structural dilemma of Germany's 'stagnation-recovery-stagnation' cycle.
Among the contributing factors, the gross fixed capital formation slightly rebounded, rising from -1.1% in the previous quarter to 0.3%, mainly driven by improvements in investments in machinery and infrastructure. Government spending grew by 0.8% quarter-on-quarter, significantly faster than the 0.2% in the second quarter, partially underpinning the overall economic performance.
However, domestic demand remains weak. Private consumption fell by 0.3% under the dual pressures of high inflation and rising interest rates, a stark contrast to the slight growth in the previous quarter. In terms of foreign trade, exports fell by 0.7%, while imports remained flat, resulting in a net export contribution of -0.3 percentage points to GDP.
At the industry level, the trend shows a dichotomy: manufacturing and construction continue to contract, while industries such as transportation, trade, information communication, and financial insurance remain in expansion, providing few highlights that drive GDP.
Year-on-year, Germany's GDP maintained a modest growth of 0.3% for the third consecutive quarter, narrowly avoiding a technical recession.
The ECB Resists Interest Rates Cuts Despite Economic Weakness
Despite continued weakness in German economic data, the European Central Bank recently adopted a particularly tough policy stance. Several Governing Council members emphasized in public speeches that interest rate cuts should not be easily initiated due to short-term economic slowdowns, citing reasons such as the resilience of inflation in the service sector, persistent tightness in the labor market, and potential upward risks posed by energy price fluctuations.
This suggests that the ECB is facing an awkward policy paradox: the economy continues to show signs of weakness, but inflation has not yet firmly returned to the 2% target, keeping the window for early interest rate cuts closed.
Analysts point out that the ECB's caution may prolong the economic downturn. As Germany is the manufacturing and export hub of Europe, its weak performance often has a 'spillover' effect, potentially further dragging down overall growth in the Eurozone.
EUR/USD Under Pressure Amid Increasingly Complex Policy Outlook
As the market reassesses Europe's growth potential, the euro-dollar exchange rate faces pressure. Although the upward space of the U.S. dollar index is limited in the near term, if the ECB maintains a hawkish stance and the economy lacks momentum, the EUR/USD could fall into a "decoupling of fundamentals and policy signals" fluctuating pattern.
Forex strategists note that in the context of weakening economic data and intertwined European political uncertainties, market pricing for the ECB's future path is becoming increasingly wavering, and Germany's "reaffirmed stagnation" undoubtedly exacerbates this uncertainty.
Structural Bottlenecks Need Resolution, Policy Coordination is Key
Looking ahead to 2026-2027, Germany's economic growth is expected to be 1.3% and 1.4%, respectively, although these forecasts have been repeatedly downgraded. High energy costs, insufficient industrial investment willingness, and the complexity of the global trade environment are all seen as constraints.
Several research institutions warn that if the ECB insists on maintaining high interest rates for a longer period, it may further suppress corporate investment and consumer recovery, thereby prolonging the stagnation cycle.
Policymakers need to carefully balance between curbing inflation and supporting growth, and the weakness in German data may force the ECB to reassess its stance of "maintaining high interest rates" in the coming months.