Economic news

Japan's Services Growth Slows as Middle East War Dents Confidence, PMI

TOKYO, April 3 (Reuters) - Japan's services sector grew at its weakest pace in three months in March, a private survey showed on Friday, as rising ​uncertainty over the Middle East war crushed business confidence to ‌its lowest level since the pandemic.

Here are the key details:

• The S&P Global final Japan Services Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) fell to 53.4 in March from a 21-month ​high of 53.8 in February, but topped the flash reading of 52.8 ​and marked the 12th month of expansion. Readings above 50.0 ⁠indicate growth in activity, while those below point to a contraction.

• ​Among key sub-indexes, new business rose at the slowest pace since December. ​New export orders, meanwhile, increased at a faster pace from February.

• Business confidence fell to its lowest level since September 2020, as firms expressed concern over the impact ​and duration of the Middle East war on global demand and ​inflation.

• Cost pressures intensified sharply, with input prices rising at the fastest pace in ‌nearly ⁠a year. The Middle East war contributed to higher costs for raw materials, energy and fuel, according to respondents. However, output charge inflation eased from February's near 12-year high.

• Employment growth slowed to a five-month low, with ​some firms citing that ​candidate shortages ⁠and voluntary departures had limited payroll growth.

• Annabel Fiddes, Economics Associate Director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said: "Uncertainty ​over how long the Middle East war might go ​on for, ⁠and its impact on global demand and inflation, was a key factor driving down business confidence in March".

• The broader picture showed Japan's Composite PMI, ⁠which ​includes both manufacturing and services, fell to ​53.0 in March from a 33-month high of 53.9 in February, indicating a slower but still ​robust growth in overall business activities.

Reporting by Kantaro Komiya Editing by Shri Navaratnam

Source: Reuters


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