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Euro zone business growth at six-month low in October as price pressures soar

IHS Markit's Flash Composite Purchasing Managers' Index fell to a six-month low of 54.2 in October from 56.2 in September
IHS Markit's Flash Composite Purchasing Managers' Index fell to a six-month low of 54.2 in October from 56.2 in September

Euro zone business growth slipped to a six-month low in October as supply chain bottlenecks and logistical issues related to the Covid-19 pandemic pushed input prices to rise at the fastest rate in over 20 years.

Government restrictions are being lifted in the euro zone but shortages of raw materials in the manufacturing sector are impacting growth and the pent-up demand unleashed across the services industry is waning.

IHS Markit's Flash Composite Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), a good gauge of overall economic health, fell to a six-month low of 54.2 in October from 56.2 in September.

This was just below an earlier 54.3 "flash" estimate.

"The PMIs suggest the euro zone's economic recovery will slow markedly in Q4 as supply shortages intensified throughout the region, especially for manufacturers," said Jessica Hinds at Capital Economics.

"They also show that price pressures are building, even in the periphery."

A Reuters poll last month suggested growth in the bloc would slow to 1.1% this quarter after expanding 2% in the third quarter.

The services PMI index fell to a six-month low of 54.6 in October from 56.4, a notch lower than the preliminary estimate of 54.7 but still comfortably above the 50 mark separating growth from contraction.

Demand weakened though and the new business index dropped to 55.1 from 55.3.

While euro zone manufacturing activity remained strong last month it was curtailed by supply chain bottlenecks, a survey showed earlier this week.

Those bottlenecks have caused the costs of raw materials to soar and the composite input prices index climbed to 73.2 from 70.9, by far the highest since the survey began in mid-1998.

"Inflation will peak at 4.5%. That is very high but likely to abate over the course of next year, we already see promising signs in container shipping for instance," said Holger Schmieding at Berenberg.

The supply constraints meant growth slowed in Germany, Europe's largest economy, for a third month and it was a similar picture in France, Spain and Italy.

In Britain, outside the currency union, businesses reported faster growth, data showed today, but the Bank of England is likely to be worried about record rises in the costs faced by businesses, which are being passed on to consumers.

The Bank of England kept interest rates on hold today, dashing investors' expectations for a hike that would have made it the first of the world's big central banks to raise rates after the Covid-19 pandemic.

But the Bank of England kept alive the prospect of tighter monetary policy soon, saying it would probably have to raise its Bank Rate from its all-time low of 0.1% "over coming months" if the economy performed as expected.

In the US, a measure of services industry activity surged to a record high last month as declining Covid-19 cases boosted demand although businesses remained burdened by snarled supply chains and the resulting exorbitant prices.