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Italy services costs at 3-year high as business contracts, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Jun 3, 2026 | 2:48 AM

ROME, June 3 (Reuters) – Cost pressures in Italy’s service sector hit a 40-month high in May as the impact of the conflict in the ​Middle East became more acute, a survey showed ‌on Wednesday.

The measure of input cost inflation in S&P Global’s Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for Italy’s service sector accelerated to 66.7 from 65.5 in April, marking the highest reading since January 2023.

The headline ‌PMI, ​a broader gauge of services activity, ⁠fell to 49.4, below ⁠the 50.0 threshold that separates growth from contraction for a third month in a row, following a 49.8 reading in April.

A Reuters survey of 11 analysts ​had pointed to a reading of 49.1.

S&P Global economist Eleanor Dennison said services cost pressures could rise further ⁠if the war in the ⁠Middle East drags on, while “glimmers of hope” ​could be found in the report’s employment and future outlook ​indicators.

The employment subindex rose to 50.6 and the ‌gauge of future activity increased to 59.5 last month, from 50.3 and 59.1 respectively in April.

S&P Global’s sister survey for Italy’s smaller manufacturing sector, released on Monday, showed ⁠input cost inflation accelerating for a fifth month running in May to hit a four-year high.

The composite PMI, combining manufacturing ⁠and services, was ‌virtually stable in May at 50.4, ⁠versus 50.5 the month before.

Prime Minister Giorgia ​Meloni’s ‌government in April cut its economic growth ​outlook to ⁠0.6% for this year and next from previous targets of 0.7% and 0.8% respectively.

The government forecast a 0.8% growth rate for 2028, which would mark six consecutive years of sub-1% growth.

(Reporting by Antonella Cinelli, editing by Gavin Jones ​and Hugh Lawson)