Federal Reserve action and emerging market weakness will also impact equipment manufacturers.
01/13/2016
During the last year in the Eurozone, one of the most headline-capturing issues was the threat that Greece would be forced out of the common currency. Although a third bailout package has dampened this crisis for the time being, the danger has not been eliminated. This is primarily because institutional resistance to enacting reforms demanded by international creditors, coupled with a sclerotic Greek economy, could mean that it is only a matter of time before Greece faces another potential exit—with all of the euro-weakening instability that will result.
In addition, other countries—most recently Portugal, whose ruling party was ousted by an anti-austerity coalition, thereby calling into question its commitment to economic reforms—have the potential to face similar challenges as Greece. Even Spain and Italy are at risk. Although Spain has undergone a period of reform and deflation within the Eurozone, which is making it internationally competitive again, continued high unemployment may undermine the political legitimacy of the government and lead either this government, or a new one, to abandon reforms. Italy, on the other hand, seems to have stabilized, but a stagnant economy coupled with a large public debt could cause the nation to fall back into a crisis.