Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Services sector gauged to slow in March

- MARK NIQUETTE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Chris Middleton of Bloomberg News.

Growth in the U.S. services sector eased in March for a second month while a gauge of input costs slumped to a fouryear low.

The Institute for Supply Management’s composite gauge of services fell 1.2 points to 51.4, largely reflecting a drop in the supplier deliveries index to a record low. Readings above 50 indicate expansion, and the March figure was lower than all but one estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

The index of prices paid for materials and services decreased more than 5 points to 53.4, the lowest since March 2020, according to the report issued Wednesday.

That stands in stark contrast to Institute for Supply Management data released earlier this week showing a manufactur­ing input-cost gauge climbed to the highest level since July 2022, suggesting the pace of goods disinflati­on is leveling off.

The services price data may temper concerns that the Federal Reserve’s progress on inflation is at risk of stalling. Policymake­rs are tracking developmen­ts in the services sector, the largest part of the economy, for signs of easing price pressures as they debate when to reduce interest rates.

With the decline in March, the Institute for Supply Management’s gauge of prices paid by services dipped below the manufactur­ing input-cost measure for the first time since May 2022.

Still, service-industry respondent­s noted “that even with some prices stabilizin­g, inflation is still a concern,” Anthony Nieves, chair of the ISM Services Business Survey Committee, said in a statement.

The overall services index was depressed by the gauge of delivery times, which dropped 3.5 points to the lowest in data back to 1997. Signs of improving supply chains help explain why order backlogs at service providers shrank at the fastest pace since August.

Twelve services industries reported growth in March, led by accommodat­ion and food services. Four indicated a decrease in activity.

The Institute for Supply Management’s new orders gauge fell to a three-month low, though remained consistent with resilient demand.

The group’s business activity index — which parallels its factory output gauge — showed the strongest growth since September.

The measure of services employment ticked up slightly but remained in contractio­n territory.

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