Eurozone economy hits speed bump: survey
Eurozone private sector business activity slowed in July for the second month running but was still running near six-year highs, a closely watched survey showed Monday.
Analysts said that while the slip in the headline readings of the survey by data monitoring company IHS Markit was disappointing, the economy remained on its best run since the eurozone debt crisis.
IHS Markit said its July Composite Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) came in at 55.8 points, the lowest reading in six months and down from 56.3 in June.
The PMI measures companies' willingness to invest in their business and so gives a good idea of how well the underlying economy is performing. Any reading above the boom-bust 50 points line indicates the economy is expanding.
By sector, the all important services index was unchanged at 55.4 points in July, while manufacturing fell to 56.8 points from 57.4 points in June.
IHS Markit chief business economist Chris Williamson stressed that the state of economy in the 19-nation eurozone remained "impressive".
"It's too early to know for sure whether the economy has merely hit a speed bump or whether the upturn is already starting to fade," Williamson said.
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