Stagnation in Japan Service Sector Confirmed
2026-06-03 00:54
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
Japan’s S&P Global Services PMI was at 50.0 in May 2026, aligning with the preliminary estimate and marking its lowest level since March 2025.
The reading ended a 13-month run of expansion, pointing to stagnation in the services sector.
Growth in new orders slowed to its weakest pace since the current cycle began near two years ago.
Export orders fell at the fastest rate in more than four years, underscoring softer overseas appetite.
Employment growth eased to a nine-month low, while backlogs of work rose modestly.
Cost pressures mounted, with input prices increasing the most in 43 months, driven by higher fuel, energy, and raw material costs amid supplier hikes linked to Middle East tensions.
Rising labor expenses added to the squeeze, prompting firms to raise selling prices at a near-record pace.
Lastly, sentiment improved for a second month but stayed below post-pandemic norms, with companies citing geopolitical risks, elevated costs, and demographic headwinds from aging population.