Eurozone business activity slowed again in May, a survey showed on Tuesday, and forward-looking indicators suggest a further loss of momentum in coming months. The pace of growth has slowed from the turn of the year and - possibly of concern to policymakers at the European Central Bank - inflation pressure also eased last month.
Still, inflation was 1.9 percent last month, official data showed on Thursday, pretty much bang on the ECB's target and giving the central bank room to move away from its ultra-easy monetary policy. IHS Markit's Final Composite Purchasing Managers' Index, seen as a good overall indicator of euro zone growth, fell to an 18-month low of 54.1 in May from April 's 55.1, still above the 50 mark separating growth from contraction.
New order growth weakened, backlogs of work were amassed at a shallower rate and hiring slowed. This meant firms were at their least optimistic since late 2016, causing the future output index to sink to 63.7 from 65.7. A survey covering the bloc's dominant service industry also declined. The services PMI fell to 53.8 from 54.7, its lowest since the start of 2017. And indicating little chance of a bounceback this month, new business growth weakened. The sub-index declined to 53.5, a 17-month low, from 54.6..