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Spain services contract for first time in nearly 3 years, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters May 6, 2026 | 2:24 AM

MADRID, May 6 (Reuters) – Spain’s services sector contracted in April for the first time since August 2023 as uncertainty linked to the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran hampered ​demand and confidence, a business survey showed on Wednesday.

The ‌Spain Services PMI Business Activity Index fell to 47.9 in April from 53.3 in March, the survey by S&P Global showed. The 50-mark separates growth from contraction.

“Firms widely reported that market demand had softened as widespread ‌uncertainty ​led businesses and consumers alike to ⁠hesitate when it came to ⁠spending decisions,” said Paul Smith, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

He added that a bleaker outlook due to the war could be helping to keep companies’ pricing power “just ​about in check”.

New business fell for the first time since last June and at the sharpest rate in more than ⁠four years. Export demand was especially ⁠weak, with international sales declining at the steepest ​pace since mid-2022.

Confidence also deteriorated sharply. Sentiment among service providers ​fell to its lowest level since December 2022 as firms ‌said clients were delaying investment and new projects amid a fragile geopolitical environment.

Employment nevertheless continued to rise, extending growth seen since October 2022, although the pace softened from March. Backlogs of ⁠work edged up for a second month, partly because shortages of products such as IT equipment hindered contract fulfilment.

Price pressures remained elevated ⁠in April. Input ‌costs rose at a historically high pace – driven ⁠by energy, fuel, supplier and wage costs – ​while output ‌charges increased markedly and were little changed ​from March’s ⁠seven-month high.

The weakness in services pushed the S&P Global Spain Composite PMI down to 48.7 from 52.4, leaving overall private sector activity in contraction territory for the first time in nearly two-and-a-half years, even as manufacturing output rose solidly.

(Reporting by David Latona; Editing ​by Joe Bavier)