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German Business Activity Hits 18-Month Low in June, PMI

BERLIN, June 23 (Reuters) - Germany's private sector activity contracted at its fastest pace in 18 months in June as ​the services downturn deepened, a survey showed on Tuesday.

The ‌Composite Flash Purchasing Managers' Index for Germany, compiled by S&P Global, fell to 48.0 in June from 48.8 in May, below the expectations ​of analysts polled by Reuters that it would ​be at 49.6.

The 50-mark separates growth from contraction.

"The bad ⁠news is that business activity has fallen for a third ​month running and at the quickest rate in this sequence, ​thereby further increasing the likelihood of the economy having slipped back into contraction in the second quarter," said Phil Smith, economics associate director ​at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

SERVICES LEAD THE DECLINE AGAIN

The flash ​services PMI fell to 46.8 from 48.1, its lowest since November 2022.

"The ‌service ⁠sector continues to act as a notable drag on the economy, seeing rates of decline in both business activity and new work gather pace in June," Smith said.

Meanwhile, the manufacturing ​PMI edged down ​to 50.0 ⁠from 50.1.

New business declined for a fourth straight month and at the fastest rate since ​December 2024.

"The good news is that inflationary pressures ​have ⁠started to ease off," Smith said. Input cost inflation eased to a four-month low, while firms' output price inflation slowed to ⁠its ​weakest pace in three months.

Business expectations for ​the coming 12 months weakened slightly overall and remained below the long-run ​trend, the survey showed.

Reporting by Maria Martinez; Editing by Joe Bavier

Source: Reuters


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