The composite PMI increased from 51 to 51.2 in September, indicating that the economy maintained a modest pace of growth in the third quarter.
We suspected that last month's very strong PMI was a one-off. It was mainly the result of strong manufacturing, and the European Commission's survey had shown a jump in recent production but not in expectations. Today's data confirm this view. Most notably, manufacturing has now reversed, falling to its lowest point in three months. But service sector business activity picked up significantly, keeping the PMI at a level associated with modest growth. That rounds out a decent quarter for the eurozone economy despite significant global turmoil.
From a country perspective, France stands out negatively. The PMI dropped to the lowest level since April, with declines in both manufacturing and services. That stands in contrast to Germany, where services activity picked up according to the PMI. With heightened political uncertainty, the French economy appears to be mirroring this sense of instability.
The inflation outlook remains benign according to the survey, as input cost inflation eased a bit, which was also reflected in selling prices. And don’t expect much of a resurgence of wage pressure either, as employment remains muted – also confirmed by today’s PMI. Eurozone inflation has been very stable around the 2% target in recent months, and we don’t expect too much deviation in the months ahead either. If anything, it could go slightly below target, but nothing for the ECB to act on.
Read the original analysis: Eurozone PMI marches on thanks to stronger services sector
作者:ING Global Economics Team,文章来源FXStreet,版权归原作者所有,如有侵权请联系本人删除。
风险提示:本文所述仅代表作者个人观点,不代表 Followme 的官方立场。Followme 不对内容的准确性、完整性或可靠性作出任何保证,对于基于该内容所采取的任何行为,不承担任何责任,除非另有书面明确说明。


加载失败()