The
OECD's monthly leading indicator, a measure designed to flag
turning points in the international economy, showed dips for the
United States, the United Kingdom and other key economies such
as China and Brazil in May.
The indicator, a synthetic index where 100 is the long-term
average, fell to 99.5 in the United States from 99.6 in April.
The index remained at 100.7 in the euro zone for the third
consecutive month but eased to 99.8 from April's 100.0 in the
United Kingdom.
China's reading declined to 97.3 from 97.5 and Brazil's to 98.8
from 99.1.
The index was stable in Japan at 99.9.
Within the euro zone, the index also held steady at 100.7 in
France and at 101.0 in Italy, while for Germany it rose to 100.0
from 99.9.
(Reporting by Matthias Blamont; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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