BENGALURU, July 3 (Reuters) – India’s dominant services sector expanded at its slowest pace in 17 months in June as domestic demand āweakened sharply and overall new business grew at its slowest ārate in over two-and-a-half years, according to a survey that also showed hiring nearly stalling.
⢠āHSBC’s India Services Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), compiled by S&P Global, fell to 57.4 last month from May’s 59.8, but was slightly higher than a preliminary estimate of 57.3. Readings above 50.0 indicate growth in activity.
⢠“The loss of āmomentum points to more ā challenging market conditions and weaker demand, particularly at home,” said Pranjul Bhandari, chief India economist at HSBC. New business – ā a key gauge of demand – rose at the slowest pace since November 2023.
⢠International demand offered a partial offset with new export orders growing at ātheir fastest āpace in three months.
⢠With demand āsoftening, headcount was barely increased āand only around 1% of firms reported taking in additional staff – a marked retreat from strong job creation in April and May.
⢠Input cost inflation eased to a five-month low as the price of electricity, food, fuel and transportation rose at a softer pace. Firms passed on less āof that burden to clients as the āprices charged sub-index fell to a seven-month ālow.
⢠Business confidence faded āto a five-month low with firms citing competition, difficult economic āconditions and rupee depreciation as āconcerns, underscoring broader caution āabout global trade uncertainty and financial market volatility.
⢠The India Composite PMI, which covers both services and manufacturing, slipped to its weakest āsince March as āoutput, new orders and employment all expanded at softer rates across āthe private sector and business sentiment hit a five-month low.
(Reporting āby Anant ChandakEditing by Shri Navaratnam)
