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India’s June private sector growth slips to three-month low as demand, confidence cool, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Jun 23, 2026 | 12:08 AM

BENGALURU, June 23 (Reuters) – India’s private sector expanded at its slowest pace in three months in June as weaker demand growth weighed on both factory ​and services activity, while business confidence slipped ‌to its lowest level since January, a survey showed.

• HSBC’s flash India Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), compiled by S&P Global, fell to 57.4 this month from May’s 59.3. A PMI reading above 50.0 indicates ‌expansion ​in activity.

• Overall new orders, ⁠a key gauge of demand, ⁠rose at their slowest pace since March with firms citing competitive pressures and gas shortages as obstacles to securing business.

• On the export front, the picture ​was mixed as services companies saw slightly faster international sales growth but manufacturers recorded their weakest rise ⁠in new export orders since March ⁠2023.

• The services PMI fell to a ​17-month low of 57.3 from 59.8 while the manufacturing PMI ​slipped to a three-month low of 54.5 in ‌June from 55.0 last month.

• The moderation in demand curbed job creation. Employment across the private sector rose only marginally in June – the weakest gain in the current ⁠six-month run of expansion – with hiring at both factories and service providers at their lowest since December.

• Cost pressures eased ⁠for a third ‌straight month, dropping to their lowest level ⁠since January. Selling price inflation also cooled, ​with ‌overall charges rising at the weakest pace ​in six ⁠months as some firms refrained from passing on increases amid challenging demand conditions.

• Business confidence slipped below its long-run average in June with sentiment at goods producers dropping to its weakest in nearly four years.

(Reporting by Anant ChandakEditing ​by Shri Navaratnam)