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French Services Sector Shrinks in May at Fastest Pace since Late 2020, PMI

PARIS, June 3 (Reuters) - France's services sector contracted at its sharpest pace in 5-1/2 years in May as weaker demand and ​rising costs due to the Iran war hammered businesses, a ‌survey showed on Wednesday.

The S&P Global France Services final Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) fell to 44.3 points in May from 46.5 in April. Any ​figure below 50 points marks a contraction in ​activity while above 50 points shows expansion.

The final reading ⁠was better than the flash PMI figure of 42.9, but ​it was nevertheless the lowest figure since November 2020, when ​the global economy was being hammered by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The composite final PMI for May, which includes both the services and manufacturing sectors, ​fell to 44.9 points from 47.6 in April. That ​was better than the flash figure of 43.5 points but still marked ‌its ⁠lowest level in 28 months.

"France's service sector, which had already been showing vulnerability prior to the outbreak of war in the Middle East, suffered a heavy setback in May. Further ​falls in ​the PMI measures ⁠of activity and new business took them down to levels which ring recession alarm bells," ​said Joe Hayes, principal economist at S&P ​Global Market ⁠Intelligence.

"Geopolitical uncertainty is restricting decision-making, while surging price pressures are eroding purchasing power. It's hard to see how France's economy ⁠can ​spring back to life against this ​backdrop, strongly raising the prospect of a contraction in GDP for the second ​quarter," he added.

Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta; Editing by Hugh Lawson

Source: Reuters


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