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Spain’s service sector growth slows in January, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Feb 4, 2026 | 2:18 AM

MADRID, Feb 4 (Reuters) – Growth in Spain’s service sector eased in January, a survey by S&P Global showed on Wednesday, marking its slowest ‍expansion since last August as firms faced a slowdown in demand growth.

The HCOB Spain Services Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to 53.5 in January from 57.1 in December, signalling continued growth but at a weaker pace. PMI readings above ‌50 indicate growth, while those below ‌point to contraction.

Employment growth, meanwhile, reached its highest level in 10 months, as companies recruited additional staff to manage both new and existing contracts.

“Despite the slowdown in January, firms ​remain confident about the business outlook for the year ahead,” said Jonas Feldhusen, Junior Economist at Hamburg ‍Commercial Bank.

“This optimism is also ​mirrored in hiring intentions: companies anticipate ​a higher workload and continued growth and are therefore seeking ‍to expand capacity,” Feldhusen added.

New business growth softened to its slowest since last June, with export sales declining for the second time in three months. Service providers noted weaker sales to key European markets ‍at the start of 2026.

Meanwhile, input cost inflation remained elevated, driven by rising supplier charges and increased labour expenses, ‍prompting service providers ‍to raise their own prices at ​a quicker pace.

The composite PMI, which includes ​both ⁠services and manufacturing sectors, fell to ‌52.9 in January from 55.6 in December, indicating the slowest growth in seven months.

Despite the downshift, business confidence improved to a 12-month high, with firms expecting demand to pick up in the near term.

(Reporting by David Latona; Editing ⁠by Joe Bavier)