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French May Activity Shrinks at Fastest Pace in 5-1/2Y: PMI

PARIS, May 21 (Reuters) - France's private sector economy contracted in May at its sharpest pace in five-and-a-half years, reflecting an accelerated ​decline in services activity and a fresh drop in ‌manufacturing production, a preliminary survey from S&P Global showed on Thursday.

The steepest contraction since late 2020 was a consequence of the war ​in the Middle East, according to firms, who frequently ​cited fuel and energy cost pressures, as well as ⁠general economic angst, as reasons for lower output.

The S&P ​Global Flash France Purchasing Managers Index for services fell to ​42.9 points in May from 46.5 in April, a 66-month low. That was below a Reuters poll for 46.6.

Any figure below 50 shows ​a contraction in activity, while a reading above 50 points ​to expansion.

The flash manufacturing May PMI fell to 48.9 points from 52.8 ‌in ⁠April, and below a Reuters forecast of 52.2 points.

The composite PMI Index, which includes both services and manufacturing, fell to 43.5 points in May from 47.6 in April, a 66-month ​low.

"May's 'flash' PMI ​survey for France ⁠provides a dire set of numbers. The inflationary impact of the oil-price shock continues to ​proliferate, with price indices in both manufacturing ​and services ⁠moving higher once again," said Joe Hayes, principal economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

"Alarmingly, we saw private sector new orders ⁠plummet in ​May, giving us a clear indication ​that this shock has materially lifted recession risks for the euro zone's second-largest ​economy," he added.

Reporting by Dominique Vidalon; Editing by Toby Chopra

Source: Reuters


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