France industrial output rises most since 2020

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UCapital24 Media

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Industrial production in France surged by 3.8% month-over-month in June 2025, marking a sharp rebound from an upwardly revised 0.7% decline in May and significantly surpassing market expectations of a modest 0.8% increase.


This robust performance represents the strongest monthly expansion in industrial activity since July 2020, suggesting a notable acceleration in economic momentum as the second half of the year begins.


The recovery was primarily driven by a broad-based resurgence in manufacturing output, which climbed 3.5% after a 1.2% drop in the prior month. Within the manufacturing sector, transport equipment production posted an exceptional 16.6% gain (compared to just 0.3% in May), reflecting either strong end-demand or the resolution of previous supply chain bottlenecks.


Similarly, output of coke and refined petroleum products jumped by 21.2%, reversing a sharp 7.2% decline, likely supported by improved refinery throughput and rising energy consumption.


Outside of manufacturing, the industrial upswing was supported by solid gains in the extractive and utility segments, with output in mining, quarrying, energy, water supply, and waste management rising 5%, up from a 1.7% increase in the previous month. This indicates a synchronized rebound across several core components of the industrial economy.


Despite this strong monthly performance, the broader annual trend remains fragile. On a year-over-year basis, industrial production declined by 0.4% in June, suggesting that the recent strength is, at least for now, more of a technical rebound than a structural shift.


Moreover, in quarterly terms, industrial output contracted by 0.1% in Q2 2025 compared to Q1, reflecting lingering headwinds such as weak external demand, input cost pressures, and potentially subdued business investment.


Nevertheless, the scale of the June rebound could prompt short-term optimism and may lead to upward revisions in near-term GDP forecasts if the momentum proves sustainable. Policymakers and analysts will be watching closely in the coming months to assess whether this surge marks the beginning of a more durable industrial recovery or remains an isolated bounce following a weak spring.