Euro Area Private Sector Activity in Contraction for 2nd Month
2026-06-03 08:29
By
Joana Taborda
1 min. read
The S&P Global Eurozone Composite PMI was revised higher to 48.5 in May 2026 from a preliminary of 47.5 and compared to 48.8 in April, signaling the faster contraction in 18 months in private sector activity as inflation weighs.
It also marked back-to-back months of contraction for the first time since the end of 2024, with overall activity levels being pulled lower by services (47.7 vs 47.6) while manufacturing continued to rise (51.6 vs 52.2).
Weighing on output levels was a further fall in demand for Euro Area goods and services, with export markets a particular drag as non-domestic new orders sank at the quickest rate in five months.
Signs of softening were also apparent in the labour market as job losses picked up.
As for pricing trends, input cost pressures remained the sharpest seen since late-2022.
For a third month in succession, the rate of output price inflation quickened.
Positively, there was a modest recovery of business confidence.