| Consensus | Consensus Range | Actual | Previous | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Composite Index | 50.7 | 50.7 to 50.7 | 52.0 | 50.3 |
| Services Index | 51.3 | 51.3 to 51.3 | 52.8 | 50.9 |
Highlights
The service sector index increased to a final 52.8, up 1.5 points from the flash estimate and consensus and up 1.9 points from May's final. This signals expansion of service activity, however, it is still below the long-run average of 54.3. New business increased slightly, driven largely by greater domestic demand. Employment, however, continued its downward trend with staffing numbers falling for the ninth consecutive month, in part due to rising payroll costs and rising contributions to the National Insurance Contributions. Business confidence remained above April's two and a half year low however, it was still lower than that of May. Input price inflation continued to ease from April's 21-month high, leading to a slower increase in prices charged.
Today's data put the UK RPI at 6 and the RPI-P at 16, meaning that the real economy is modestly outperforming market forecasts.
Market Consensus Before Announcement
Definition
Description
The S&P Global PMI services data give a detailed look at the services sector, how busy it is and where things are headed. The indexes are widely used by businesses, governments and economic analysts in financial institutions to help better understand business conditions and guide corporate and investment strategy. In particular, central banks in many countries use the data to help make interest rate decisions. PMI surveys are the first indicators of economic conditions published each month and are therefore available well ahead of comparable data produced by government bodies.