Service providers sustain growth through June |
U.S. service providers barely expanded in June, helped by a pickup in business activity and bookings even as an index of employment contracted the most in three months. The Institute for Supply Management’s index of services rose nearly a point last month to 50.8, moving above the 50-mark separating expansion from contraction. Ten services industries reported growth in June, including transportation and warehousing, utilities and recreation. Six contracted, led by agriculture and construction. The ISM employment gauge dropped 3.5 points to 47.2, marking the third month of contraction in the last four. A measure of prices paid for materials and services eased in June but remained close to the highest level since late 2022. Separately, S&P Global's Services Purchasing Managers' Index for June came in at 52.9, down 0.8 points from May, but beating the forecast 52.8. "Viewed alongside an improvement in manufacturing growth reported in June, the services PMI indicates that the economy grew at a reasonable annualized rate approaching 1.5% in the second quarter, with momentum having improved since the lull seen in April. Rising demand for services has meanwhile encouraged firms to take on additional staff at a rate not seen since January," commented S&P Global Market Intelligence chief business economist Chris Williamson.