US Services Activity Falls to 8-Month Low: S&P Global
2026-01-06 14:53
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
The S&P Global US Services PMI fell to 52.5 in December of 2025 from 54.1 in the previous month, revised lower from the preliminary estimate of 52.9 and below the initial market estimate of 54 to reflect the softest increase in the sector in eight months.
New business growth dropped to its lowest in 20 months, with panelists noting higher uncertainty in market demand and lower consumer spending, citing tariffs as a key source of instability.
Likewise, trade frictions drove export orders to fall the most since May.
The softer demand for capacity and ongoing budget constraints drove employment volumes to inch lower for the first time in nine months.
Meanwhile, input price inflation rose to a seven-month high due to tariffs and broad increases in supplier charges, magnifying the increase in labor expenses.
Consequently, output charges rose to a four-month high.
Still, business confidence remained positive with support from an outlook of interest rate cuts and expanding business plans.