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German Services Contract in Apr at Fastest Pace in over 3 yrs, PMI

BERLIN, May 6 (Reuters) - Germany's service sector contracted at its steepest rate in more than three years in April as demand evaporated due to rising inflationary pressures and uncertainty ​linked to the Iran war, a survey showed on Wednesday.

The final HCOB Germany ‌Services Purchasing Managers' Index, compiled by S&P Global, fell to 46.9 in April from March's 50.9 and was in line with the preliminary reading.

April also marks the first time since August 2025 ​that the indicator fell below the 50 mark. A reading below 50 ​signals contraction, while one above 50 signifies growth.

It was also the ⁠fastest rate of decline since November 2022.

Firms pointed to the effects of the war ​and ongoing uncertainty for the dip in new business, which fell for a second ​month in a row and at its sharpest rate since January 2024.

Unlike the manufacturing sector, which has been somewhat buffered by stockbuilding efforts, the services sector has felt the conflict's immediate impacts ​on demand, said Phil Smith, economics associate director at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

The final ​S&P Global composite PMI, which includes services as well as manufacturing, fell to 48.4 in April ‌from ⁠51.9 the month before, bringing it into contraction territory for the first time in nearly a year.

"The chances of the German economy contracting in the second quarter have now risen," Smith said, adding that services firms are increasingly nervous about the outlook ​due to higher inflation ​and a squeeze ⁠on spending power across the economy.

Service providers cut jobs for a fourth consecutive month, with the pace of job-shedding quickening slightly ​from March, while backlogs of work also fell at the fastest ​rate in ⁠eight months, pointing to underused capacity.

Price pressures have also intensified, leading to output price inflation jumping to a 26-month high as firms pass on higher costs to customers.

"After refraining ⁠from ​stronger price increases in March, which perhaps reflected initial ​hopes that the conflict and any associated disruption would be short-lived, services firms have started to be more ​aggressive with their price setting," Smith said.

Reporting by Miranda Murray; Editing by Joe Bavier

Source: Reuters


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