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French Services in June Hit by Bigger Than Expected Slump

PARIS, July 3 (Reuters) - France's services sector contracted in June by more than initially forecast, as sluggish ​demand and inflationary pressures weighed on ‌businesses, said a survey by S&P Global.

The S&P Global France Services PMI Business Activity Index rose to ​46.8 points in June from 44.3 in ​May, although that final June services figure ⁠came below a flash figure of 47.4.

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

The S&P Global France Composite PMI Output Index, which includes both the services and ​manufacturing sectors, rose to 47.2 from 44.9 ​in May - also below a flash June composite PMI ‌figure ⁠of 47.6 and below that 50 points threshold.

"All things considered, the June PMI survey for France could have been much worse, especially after ​the recessionary ​warning signs ⁠being flagged in the May numbers and by the downward revision ​to first quarter GDP," said Joe Hayes, ​senior ⁠principal economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

"What hasn't changed, however, is the fact that the ⁠French ​economy is still mired by ​sluggish demand, weak business confidence and strong inflationary pressures," he ​added.

Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta; Editing by Toby Chopra

Source: Reuters


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