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German services activity shrinks again in May as energy costs weigh, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Jun 3, 2026 | 3:27 AM

BERLIN, June 3 (Reuters) – Germany’s service sector contracted for a second straight month in May as subdued demand and high energy and other costs due to the war in ​the Middle East weighed on activity, a survey showed ‌on Wednesday.

The final HCOB Germany Services Purchasing Managers’ Index, compiled by S&P Global, rose to 48.1 in May from 46.9 in April, slightly above a preliminary reading of 47.8.

May marks the first time in nearly a year that ‌the ​sector has contracted for two months in ⁠a row, as indicated ⁠by a reading below the 50.0 breakeven line.

“Demand for services continues to be stifled by a squeeze on spending power from the increased cost of energy and heightened levels of uncertainty,” ​said Phil Smith, economics associate director at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

However, he said, the easing rates of decline in overall business ⁠activity and new work offered hope ⁠that any downturn in the second quarter would be ​modest.

Work backlogs shrank for a third month running, prompting another reduction ​in staffing levels. Employment fell for a fifth consecutive month, ‌although the pace of job cuts eased.

Input cost inflation held close to April’s three-year high, driven by energy, transport and wage costs, while output price inflation eased from April’s 26-month high as ⁠some firms reported stronger competition and client resistance to higher prices.

Business expectations for the coming 12 months rebounded from April’s more than 2-1/2-year low ⁠to their highest ‌since February, which Smith said could reflect increased ⁠hopes of an end to the Middle East ​conflict as ‌well as economic support through government policies.

“It’s notable ​that confidence ⁠hasn’t fully returned to the level seen before the war began” at the end of February, he added.

The final S&P Global Germany composite PMI, which includes services as well as manufacturing, rose to 48.8 in May from 48.4 the month before.

(Reporting by Miranda Murray; Editing ​by Hugh Lawson)