Germany’s service sector contracts for first time in 9 months, PMI reveals


BERLIN (Reuters) – Germany’s service sector contracted in November for the primary time in 9 months as demand situations continued to deteriorate, a survey confirmed on Wednesday.

The HCOB remaining companies Buying Managers’ Index fell to 49.3 in November from 51.6 in October, transferring beneath the 50-point threshold that separates development from contraction.

Germany’s financial system has been dogged by weak demand, intensifying competitors from overseas and political uncertainty after a funds row introduced down the nation’s three-way coalition final month. Snap elections might be held in February.

“After eight months of development, the PMI for companies dipped into unfavourable territory,” stated Hamburg Industrial Financial institution chief economist Cyrus de la Rubia.

“This implies it could’t make up for the recession within the industrial sector anymore, and the financial system may stagnate and even contract within the fourth quarter,” he added.

A composite PMI index, which contains companies and manufacturing, fell to 47.2 in November from 48.6 in October.

The report highlighted a continued decline in new enterprise, with corporations citing lowered enquiries from the general public sector and producers. New export enterprise shrank for the fifth consecutive month, albeit at a slower tempo than in October.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A waiter serves mugs of beer during the official opening of the 188th Oktoberfest, the world's largest beer festival in Munich, Germany, September 16, 2023. REUTERS/Angelika Warmuth/File Photo

The speed of job cuts within the service sector eased barely, although employment has now declined for 5 consecutive months – the longest stretch since 2009.

Price pressures picked up, pushed by rising wages, pushing up output value inflation to its highest since April.

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