European markets showed cautious optimism at the start of the week as fresh data suggested the euro zone economy may be stabilising after months of sluggish growth. On February 9, 2026, the Sentix investor confidence index for the euro area rose sharply, reaching its highest level since mid-2025. “The recession in the euro zone appears to have come to an end,” Sentix said in a statement, pointing to improving expectations across Germany and other core economies.
The improving sentiment came despite lingering political and fiscal uncertainty across the bloc. In France, the resignation of central bank governor François Villeroy de Galhau on February 9 briefly raised questions about monetary continuity, but analysts quickly played down the impact. According to Reuters, the move was “unlikely to shift the European Central Bank’s policy course,” with inflation easing and rate policy expected to remain broadly unchanged in the near term.
In the United Kingdom, markets were more volatile. Government borrowing costs rose and then retreated on February 9 as investors reacted to political pressure on Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Sterling weakened against the euro, underlining how domestic political instability can still ripple across European financial markets, even as broader euro-area sentiment improves .
Macron Pushes EU Reform Amid Global Pressure
Against this backdrop, French President Emmanuel Macron intensified calls for deeper European economic integration, framing current geopolitical tensions as a moment of opportunity. Speaking on February 10, 2026, Macron warned that trade and technology disputes with the United States were likely to return, urging the EU to seize what he called a “Greenland moment” to strengthen its collective economic power.
Macron argued that Europe must move faster on joint industrial and financial tools, including shared borrowing. “Now is the time to launch a joint borrowing capacity,” he said, stressing that without common fiscal instruments, the EU risks falling behind the U.S. and China in strategic sectors such as artificial intelligence, clean technology and defence financing.
In parallel remarks reported on February 10, Macron outlined a doctrine he described as “protection, not protectionism.” Writing and speaking to business leaders, he said Europe should favour European suppliers in public procurement and defend key industries, while avoiding blanket trade barriers. “If we do nothing, we will be overtaken,” he warned, calling for a more assertive industrial policy at the EU level.
Economists say the debate highlights a broader shift in European thinking, as the bloc balances free-market principles with strategic autonomy. While investor confidence has improved, growth remains fragile, particularly in manufacturing-heavy economies such as Germany, where high energy costs and weak global demand continue to weigh on output.
For now, markets appear encouraged by signs of stabilisation, but political decisions in the coming months will be crucial. As one EU diplomat put it, Europe faces “a narrow window to turn optimism into durable growth,” with Macron’s proposals likely to test how far member states are willing to go toward deeper economic integration in an increasingly divided global economy.




