Economic news

Hershey Beats Quarterly Estimates as Prices, Snack Demand Offset Costs

FRANKFURT, April 30 (Reuters) - The euro zone economy saw faint growth in the first quarter, ​a preliminary estimate showed on Thursday, ‌offering the first snapshot of activity since the outbreak of the Iran conflict.

The energy-importing euro ​zone is seen as particularly vulnerable among ​advanced economies to disruptions in oil, gas ⁠and other shipments through the Strait ​of Hormuz, which began in late February.

Eurostat ​said gross domestic product in the 21-country currency area rose 0.1% quarter-on-quarter in the three months ​to March, according to a flash ​reading, lagging economists' forecasts and the pace recorded in ‌the ⁠previous quarter, both at 0.2%.

A string of surveys this week points to a further slowdown in activity, with business sentiment weakening, ​services deteriorating, profits ​falling and exports ⁠still hit by tariffs, while banks signal tighter credit conditions.

The subdued ​backdrop complicates the European Central Bank’s ​response ⁠to an emerging, energy-driven rise in inflation.

The ECB is widely expected to keep rates ⁠unchanged ​on Thursday, though markets are ​pricing in three to four increases over the coming ​year.

Reporting by Francesco Canepa; Editing by Alexandra Hudson

Source: Reuters


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