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German services contract in April at fastest pace in over three years, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters May 6, 2026 | 2:58 AM

BERLIN, May 6 (Reuters) – Germany’s service sector contracted at its steepest rate in more than three years in April as demand evaporated due to rising inflationary pressures and uncertainty linked to ​the Iran war, a survey showed on Wednesday.

The final HCOB ‌Germany Services Purchasing Managers’ Index, compiled by S&P Global, fell to 46.9 in April from March’s 50.9 and was in line with the preliminary reading.

April also marks the first time since August 2025 that the indicator fell below the 50 mark. A ‌reading below ​50 signals contraction, while one above 50 ⁠signifies growth.

It was also the ⁠fastest rate of decline since November 2022.

Firms pointed to the effects of the war and ongoing uncertainty for the dip in new business, which fell for a second month in a row and at ​its sharpest rate since January 2024.

Unlike the manufacturing sector, which has been somewhat buffered by stockbuilding efforts, the services sector has felt the ⁠conflict’s immediate impacts on demand, said Phil ⁠Smith, economics associate director at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

The ​final S&P Global composite PMI, which includes services as well as manufacturing, fell ​to 48.4 in April from 51.9 the month before, bringing ‌it into contraction territory for the first time in nearly a year.

“The chances of the German economy contracting in the second quarter have now risen,” Smith said, adding that services firms are increasingly nervous about the outlook ⁠due to higher inflation and a squeeze on spending power across the economy.

Service providers cut jobs for a fourth consecutive month, with the pace of ⁠job-shedding quickening slightly from ‌March, while backlogs of work also fell at the ⁠fastest rate in eight months, pointing to underused ​capacity.

Price pressures ‌have also intensified, leading to output price inflation ​jumping to a ⁠26-month high as firms pass on higher costs to customers.

“After refraining from stronger price increases in March, which perhaps reflected initial hopes that the conflict and any associated disruption would be short-lived, services firms have started to be more aggressive with their price setting,” Smith said.

(Reporting by Miranda Murray; Editing ​by Joe Bavier)