Eurozone factory growth slowed to a 15-month low last month, hampered by extra holidays, and forward-looking indicators suggest it will at best remain subdued in coming months, a business survey showed. After peaking at the turn of the year, growth has weakened across the bloc - although it remains relatively strong, giving the European Central Bank room to move away from its ultra-easy policy this year.
The ECB will finish its stimulus programme by the end of 2018, according to a Reuters poll of economists last month, although nearly half of those surveyed said it was not in control of inflation, which had remained stubbornly below target. But prices in the bloc rose to a faster-than-expected 1.9 percent last month from a year earlier, official data showed on Thursday, pretty much spot on the ECB's target.
Higher prices appear to have hurt demand, and IHS Markit's May final manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index for the bloc slipped for a fifth month, falling to a 15-month low of 55.5 from April's 56.2, in line with a flash reading. Anything over 50 indicates growth. An index measuring output, which feeds into a composite PMI due on Tuesday and is considered a good guide to economic health, fell to an 18-month low of 54.8 from 56.2.





















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