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The country's services sector activity contracted in September and fell to its lowest level since February 2018, amid weak demand, competitive pressures and challenging market conditions, a monthly survey showed on Friday, 4 October.
The IHS Markit Services Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) fell to 48.7 in September from 52.4 in August, as lacklustre client demand weighed on the performance of the Indian service economy.
According to the survey, new work intakes contracted in September, after an 18-month sequence of expansion. Firms said subdued demand conditions, unfair pricing among competitors and economic woes affected the sector.
As per the survey, growth of Indian private sector activity came to a halt in September, ending one-and-a-half-year sequence of expansion.
"Private sector output in India contracted for the first time since February 2018. This reflected a decline in sales, albeit fractional, which restricted employment growth. Worryingly, business sentiment sank to a 31-month low," said Pollyanna de Lima, Principal Economist at IHS Markit.
Challenging economic conditions hampered business sentiment in September, with optimism down at goods producers and service providers alike. Aggregate confidence fell to a 31-month low.
"A drop in aggregate input cost inflation to its lowest in around three years raises the possibility of a further cut in the benchmark interest rate," Lima said.
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