Italy Private Sector Activity Returns to Growth

2026-05-06 07:51 By Judith Sib-at 1 min. read

The S&P Global Italy Composite PMI rose to 50.5 in April 2026 from 49.2 in March.

The latest reading signals a return to expansion in overall private sector activity after a brief contraction in the previous month, largely supported by the manufacturing sector.

Meanwhile, new orders in the services sector increased, offsetting a decline in manufacturing order books.

Additionally, employment growth and business confidence regarding the 12-month outlook improved slightly compared with March.

On the price front, inflationary pressures intensified, with input costs rising at their fastest rate in three and a half years.

Firms responded by increasing output charges at the steepest pace since February 2023.



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Italy Private Sector Activity Returns to Growth
The S&P Global Italy Composite PMI rose to 50.5 in April 2026 from 49.2 in March. The latest reading signals a return to expansion in overall private sector activity after a brief contraction in the previous month, largely supported by the manufacturing sector. Meanwhile, new orders in the services sector increased, offsetting a decline in manufacturing order books. Additionally, employment growth and business confidence regarding the 12-month outlook improved slightly compared with March. On the price front, inflationary pressures intensified, with input costs rising at their fastest rate in three and a half years. Firms responded by increasing output charges at the steepest pace since February 2023.
2026-05-06
Italy Private Sector Activity Shrinks in March
The S&P Global Italy Composite PMI fell to 49.2 in March 2026 from 52.1 in February, pointing to the first contraction in private sector activity since January 2025 and the biggest since November 2024. The decline was led by a renewed fall in services activity and amid a softer expansion in manufacturing output. As similar trend was true for new orders, which likewise recorded a fresh contraction in March. Meanwhile, private sector employment growth largely stalled, and backlogs were stable. With regards to prices, inflation of input costs and output charges accelerated to 40- and 37- month highs, respectively.
2026-04-07
Italy Composite PMI at 3-Month High
The HCOB Italy Composite PMI increased to 52.1 in February 2026 from 51.4 in January, pointing to the strongest growth in private sector activity in three months. The manufacturing sector returned to expansion for the first time in three months (50.6 vs 48.1) while services growth slowed (52.3 vs 52.9). There was a moderate rise in new business, which was broad-based and although companies had sufficient capacity to work through backlogs, the rate of depletion was the weakest since July last year. Meanwhile, the rate at which jobs were added across the private sector was the strongest in eight months. Hiring activity was stronger in the service sector than it was in its manufacturing counterpart. On the price front, building cost pressures across both broad sectors pushed the composite reading to the second-highest in almost a year (softer than only November 2025). There was a similar trend of intensification in charge inflation, where the rate of increase hit a seven-month high.
2026-03-04