Markets marked the euro lower against sterling because the latest German industrial-production report weakened the euro-area growth story while the UK side of the pair still had policy support. Market reports said EUR/GBP held losses near 0.8650 after German industrial production fell 0.7% month on month in March, a weaker-than-expected reading [1][
2].
The direct trigger: a German production miss
The immediate catalyst was the German factory-output data. Coverage of the move said the euro softened against the pound after the downbeat German economic release, with EUR/GBP trading around 0.8650 in early European dealing [2]. Oanda’s report also tied the move to the same 0.7% month-on-month fall and noted softer German data alongside slightly reduced European Central Bank tightening expectations [
1].
That matters because EUR/GBP is a relative price. A lower EUR/GBP means the euro buys fewer pounds; it can fall because the euro weakens, the pound strengthens, or the euro simply looks worse than sterling in that moment.
Why German industrial production matters for the euro
Germany’s industrial data gets extra attention because Germany is the eurozone’s largest economy. Related EUR/GBP coverage described weaker German industrial production as adding to concerns about the health of that economy and weighing on the single currency .




