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US service sector growth cools as order growth drops by most in 3 years

By Thomson Reuters May 5, 2026 | 9:06 AM

May 5 (Reuters) – U.S. services sector expansion slowed for a second straight month in April as new order growth dropped by the most in three ​years and cost input pressures held at the ‌highest since late 2022 amid the steep energy prices arising from the U.S.-led war against Iran, an industry survey showed on Tuesday.

The Institute for Supply Management’s nonmanufacturing purchasing managers index dropped to 53.6 ‌last ​month from 54.0 in March. Economists ⁠surveyed by Reuters had ⁠estimated the index at 53.7. A reading above 50 indicates expansion in the vast services sector accounting for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity.

The survey’s measure ​of business activity actually ticked up 2 points to 55.9, but other components were more downbeat.

The new ⁠order index fell to 53.5 from ⁠a three-year high of 60.6 in March, ​with the 7.1-point drop being the largest since March 2023. ​Cost pressures did not abate either, as the ‌prices paid index sat unchanged at 70.7, matching a level last seen in October 2022 when the post-pandemic inflation wave was just beginning to abate.

The Iran war has not ⁠only pushed up energy prices – motor vehicle fuel prices as measured by AAA are at their highest since the summer ⁠of 2022 – but ‌has also caused supply chain snarls that ⁠are lengthening delivery times for key business ​materials. ‌ISM’s supplier delivery index, which rises as ​delivery times ⁠grow longer, rose to 56.8 – the highest since July 2022 – from 56.2 in March.

Employment also remained negative, holding below the 50-mark for a second straight month at 48.0 in April versus 45.2 the month before.

(Reporting By Dan Burns; Editing ​by Chizu Nomiyama )