The LEI offers an early indication of where the economy is headed in the near term. The March decline followed a 0.3 percent dip in February, indicating weakness in the European economy.
All five non-financial components of the index fell last month, suggesting heightened negativity. This includes consumer expectations of the general economic situation, manufacturing new orders, residential building permits, and services business expectations.
During the six-month period between September 2024 and March 2025, LEI fell by 2.8 percent, continuing the contracting trend from the previous six-month period.
“The six-month and annual growth rates of the Index, although less negative than a year ago, still point to obstacles to growth ahead,” said Stephanie Guichard, senior economist at The Conference Board.
“Taking into account the impact of new U.S. tariffs as well as the high level of uncertainty, The Conference Board projects the Euro Area’s real GDP to slow to 0.8 percent in 2025.”
Even though the European economy has been building up some resilience to deal with global shocks, rising trade tensions have caused the growth outlook to deteriorate, the ECB said.
“Increased uncertainty is likely to reduce confidence among households and firms, and the adverse and volatile market response to the trade tensions is likely to have a tightening impact on financing conditions. These factors may further weigh on the economic outlook for the euro area,” it said.
Tariffs and EU Impact
During a meeting with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni at the White House on Thursday, Trump expressed confidence in an EU trade deal.The president said he has “very little problem making a deal with Europe, or anybody else, because we have something that everybody wants.”
Trump also dismissed concerns about China attempting to win over America’s trade partners amid the ongoing tariff issue.
“Nobody can compete with us, nobody,” he said.
“The European Union’s been really tough over the years. We have a [trade] deficit with the European Union of $350 billion, and it’s going to disappear fast,” Trump said in response to a reporter’s question.
“And one of the ways that that can disappear easily and quickly is they’re going to have to buy our energy from us. ... They can buy it, we can knock off $350 billion in one week.”
“In a severe tariff scenario, GDP growth in the eurozone could be limited to 0.5 percent in 2025 and 1.2 percent in 2026, with the ECB cutting interest rates more than once this year and raising them later than we currently expect,” the report said.
“Trade uncertainty, potential failure to execute fiscal plans, and spillovers from the U.S. economy currently dominate the balance of risks. However, positive factors could tip the balance if the positive effects from fiscal stimulus programs exceed expectations or confidence improves rapidly.”