US S&P Global Composite PMI 51.9 signals slower expansion
The U.S. S&P Global Composite PMI printed 51.9 in the final February reading, down from 53.0 in January, according to Seeking Alpha. A level above 50 indicates expansion, so the data point to continued growth but at a slower pace.
The U.S. Services PMI registered 51.7 in February, as per scanx.trade. That reading remains consistent with modest services-sector expansion.
Immediate takeaways for US Services PMI and Federal Reserve expectations
The final 51.9 Composite PMI came in below the 52.3 flash estimate, as reported by InvestingLive. As a diffusion index, PMI tracks the breadth of growth rather than output size; a softer expansion signal may support a “wait-and-see” stance from the Federal Reserve if sustained, though policy depends on a broader data set.
Commentary from the survey publisher’s economists has recently emphasized that growth remains positive but cooler than earlier in the cycle. “Business growth was in a lower gear… expansion has cooled from its prior, more robust pace, though it remains in positive territory,” said Chris Williamson, Chief Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.
At the time of this writing, Bitcoin (BTC) traded near $71,995 with a 14-day RSI around 46, indicating neutral momentum in crypto market context.
What to watch next: subcomponents and global comparisons
Key sub-index focus: new orders, employment, input and output prices
Forward momentum typically hinges on new orders and employment. Firming new business alongside steady hiring would suggest resilience, while softer order books or slower job growth could signal fading demand.
Price gauges within the survey, input costs and output charges, help frame inflation direction. Easing input costs and restrained output pricing would be consistent with disinflation, whereas persistent price pressures could complicate the policy backdrop.
Benchmarks: prior reading, flash estimate, and Germany services context
For context, the U.S. composite index eased from last month’s higher print and finished below its preliminary estimate. In Europe, Germany’s services activity accelerated to a four-month high in February, driven by stronger demand, as reported by Reuters.
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