‘Overall, business conditions the past month were flat as compared with several months of growth. While levels haven’t decreased, it may be that overall conditions have reached a high watermark.’ – Retail Trade
Business activity in the US non-manufacturing sector fell last month but remained in the expansion territory for the 89th straight month. The Institute for Supply Management reported on Monday that its PMI for the US services sector dropped to 56.9 in May from the prior month’s 57.5, whereas analysts anticipated a slighter decrease to 57.1 points during the reported month. The ISM said that 17 non-manufacturing industries reported growth last month. The New Orders Index fell to 57,7 from April’s 63.2, whereas the Prices Index declined to 49.2 in May from 57.6, marking the first drop in 13 months. Meanwhile, the Employment Index surged to 57.8 from the preceding month’s 51.4, surprising markets after the weak NFP Report released last week. Analysts said that growth in the non-manufacturing sector remained solid despite May’s drop, as the growth rate and the Employment Index remained high. Moreover, 15 industries reported employment growth, while just one posted an employment fall. The following employment figures suggested that weak slow job creation in the private sector would be temporary.