Eurozone Rebound Fizzles Out As Service Sector Reports Renewed Decline

 | Sep 23, 2020 12:17

  • Flash Eurozone PMI signals stalling economy as rebound from COVID-19 fades
  • Services contract, offsetting faster manufacturing expansion
  • Germany leads upturn thanks to manufacturing surge, France and periphery slip back into decline
  • Job losses ease but remain higher than at any time since early-2013
  • Business activity stalled across the eurozone in September, albeit with increasingly divergent trends by sector and country. Faster growth of manufacturing, led by Germany, was offset by a renewed downturn in the service sector, which was often linked to resurgent coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection rates.

    A net loss of jobs continued to be reported, though the rate of payroll reduction eased, notably in manufacturing, thanks in part to improved future expectations. Price pressures meanwhile moderated during the month.

    Business stalls

    The flash IHS Markit Eurozone Composite PMI® fell for a second successive month in September, dropping from 51.9 in August to 50.1, indicating only a very marginal increase in business activity. Having rebounded sharply in July and, to a lesser extent, August from COVID-19 lockdowns during the second quarter, the PMI has since indicated a near stalling of the economy at the end of the third quarter as rising infection rates and ongoing social distancing measures curbed demand, notably for consumer-facing services.

    Manufacturing output growth accelerated in September to the fastest since February 2018, fueled by the largest rise in new orders seen over this period. But the service sector, having already almost stalled back in August, recorded the largest contraction of output since May, albeit with the rate of decline running far weaker than seen during the height of the pandemic.