Updates - Macro Trend

US Services Growth Slows as Employment Shrinks Most Since 2020

Mark Niquette
Bloomberg
January 5,2024

  • ISM services PMI decreased 2.1 points in December to 50.6
  • Gauge of new orders dropped to three-month low of 52.8

The US service sector came close to stagnating at the end of 2023 as a gauge of employment showed the biggest contraction in more than three years.

The Institute for Supply Management’s overall gauge of services decreased 2.1 points, the most since March, to 50.6 in December. The index, while remaining above the 50 level that indicates expansion, was the second-weakest of the year.

The December reading was lower than all estimates in a Bloomberg survey of economists. A sustained slowdown in services would raise concerns about the risk of a broader cooling of the US economy. Earlier this week, the ISM said its manufacturing index remained in contraction territory for a 14th month.

The gauge of employment among service providers plunged 7.4 points to 43.3, the lowest level since July 2020 and a sign of dissipating momentum in the US labor market.

A separate report Friday from the government showed private payrolls picked up in December after downwardly revised advances in the prior two months. The three-month average of 115,000 matched the smallest since mid-2020.

The ISM report also showed a gauge of new orders placed with service providers slipped to a three-month low, suggesting a more tempered outlook for demand.

“The services sector had a pullback in the rate of growth in December, attributed to the decrease in the rate of growth for new orders and contraction in employment,” Anthony Nieves, chair of the Institute for Supply Management Services Business Survey Committee, said in a statement. “There are concerns related to economic uncertainty, geopolitical events and labor constraints.”

Nine industries reported expansion in December, including accommodation and food services, health care and transportation and warehousing. Nine sectors also reported decreasing activity, led by real estate and entertainment and recreation.

While the topline purchasing managers number declined, the business activity index, which parallels ISM’s factory output gauge, expanded at a faster pace in December.

The ISM’s measure of sentiment about inventory levels also fell nearly 7 points after surging in November to the highest level since the onset of the pandemic. The index of inventories eased below 50, suggesting providers see better balance between supply and demand.

A metric of prices paid for materials fell to a five-month low of 57.4, indicating that costs are still rising but at a slower pace.