HCOB's composite Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for the
currency union, compiled by S&P Global and seen as a good gauge
of overall economic health, bounced to 51.7 in April from
March's 50.3, surpassing a preliminary 51.4 estimate.
That was its second month above the 50 mark separating growth
from contraction and the highest since May last year.
"Service providers have now expanded their activity for the
third consecutive month, putting an end to the lack of dynamism
observed in the second half of last year," said Cyrus de la
Rubia, chief economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank.
The services PMI leapt to 53.3 from 51.5, above the flash
estimate of 52.9 and its highest reading since last May.
A sister survey released last week showed factory activity in
the euro zone took a turn for the worse in April, highlighting
the divergence between the two sectors.
Overall optimism about the year ahead remained buoyant. The
composite future output index dipped only slightly from March's
61.6 - its highest since February 2022 - to 61.6.
Suggesting services firms expect the rebound to continue they
increased headcount at the fastest pace in almost a year, with
the employment index climbing to 53.5 from 52.3.
"Encouragingly, employment has increased at a faster rate,
aligning with the uptick in new business and the growth of the
order book, which has seen its strongest expansion in eleven
months," de la Rubia added.
(Reporting by Jonathan Cable; editing by Christina Fincher)
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