Eurozone Private Sector Expands Despite Ukraine War, High Cost Of Living
24 Mai 2022 - 10:14AM
RTTF2
Euro area private sector expanded at a stronger pace in May, led
by the services sector, despite the war in Ukraine, supply
constraints and rising cost of living, flash survey results from
S&P Global showed on Tuesday.
The composite output index dropped to 54.9 in May from 55.8 in
April. The reading was forecast to fall moderately to 55.3.
However, the current level above 50.0 indicates strong growth in
the private sector.
Growth was driven by the service sector, which posted its
second-strongest increase in the past eight months.
Many consumer-facing service sector businesses reported robust
demand due to the reopening of the economy after the restrictions
related to the spread of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus
were relaxed.
The services Purchasing Managers' Index slid to 56.3 from 57.7 a
month ago. Economists had forecast a score of 57.5.
At the same time, the survey showed that factory output
continued to be constrained by widespread supply shortages, with
the Ukraine war and China's Covid lockdowns having exacerbated
existing pandemic-related supply chain pressures.
At 54.4, the manufacturing PMI reached an 18-month low in May,
down from 55.5 in April and economists' forecast of 54.9.
Thanks to buoyant demand for services, particularly from
households, the PMI data are consistent with the economy growing at
a solid quarterly rate of 0.6 percent so far in the second quarter,
Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global Market
Intelligence, said.
Although the small fall in overall composite PMI suggests that
activity is holding up better, the services rebound is likely to
run out of steam amid high inflation and the drop in new orders
bodes ill for industry, Jessica Hinds, an economist at Capital
Economics, said.
So GDP growth is still likely to be weak for much of this year,
Hinds added.
Within the currency bloc, the survey revealed that France
recorded the strongest expansion, its rate of growth easing
slightly on April but remaining the second-strongest since June of
last year.
The flash composite output index decreased moderately to 57.1 in
May from April's 51-month high of 57.6. The reading was above the
expected 57.0.
The services PMI fell to 58.4 from 58.9 and also remained below
the forecast of 58.6. Likewise, the factory PMI dipped to 54.5 from
55.7 in April. The flash score was 55.0.
Meanwhile, growth in Germany gained a little momentum compared
to April and ran close to the average recorded so far this
year.
Germany's composite output index came in at 54.6 in May, marking
a slight improvement from April's 54.3 but below the expected score
of 54.0.The sector continued to grow for the fifth straight month
amid a sustained strong rebound in service sector activity.
The services PMI registered 56.3, down from 57.6 in the previous
month. The expected level was 57.2. Meanwhile, the factory PMI rose
marginally to 54.7 from 54.6.
Euro vs Sterling (FX:EURGBP)
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Euro vs Sterling (FX:EURGBP)
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