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German service sector growth slows to seven-month low, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Apr 7, 2026 | 3:07 AM

BERLIN, April 7 (Reuters) – Business activity growth in Germany’s service sector abruptly lost momentum in March as demand weakened amid fallout from ​the war in the Middle East, a ‌survey showed on Tuesday.

The final S&P Global services PMI for Germany fell to 50.9 in March from 53.5 in February, marking its lowest reading since September and slightly below ‌a ​preliminary reading of 51.2.

A reading ⁠above 50 indicates growth ⁠while one below signals contraction.

Phil Smith, economics associate director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, cited higher prices at the petrol pumps and heightened uncertainty ​as leading to the slowdown.

Despite the sharply rising costs, however, service providers have not been ⁠able to pass on greater ⁠price increases to customers due to ​the weaker demand environment, he added.

“Inflows of new business ​have fallen for the first time since last ‌September in a clear sign of the Middle East war’s immediate impact on demand, whilst a notable drop in business expectations underlines how higher energy ⁠prices, supply chain disruption and generally elevated levels of uncertainty are set to stifle growth in the year ⁠ahead,” said Smith.

Business ‌expectations dropped to a three-month low ⁠in March, to 53.4, and slipped ​below ‌the long-run average of 56.7.

The final ​S&P Global ⁠composite PMI, which includes manufacturing and services, ticked down to 51.9 in March from 53.2 the previous month, a three-month low driven entirely by the downturn in the service sector.

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