
Russian service sector nears stagnation as new order growth weakens, PMI shows
April 3 (Reuters) - Russia's service sector lost further momentum in March, with business activity growing at its shallowest rate in nine months as new order growth eased and employment contracted, a business survey showed on Thursday.
The S&P Global Purchasing Managers' Index for Russian services fell to 50.1 in March from 50.5 in February, indicating only a tiny expansion in output. Readings above 50 signal growth in activity, while below that indicates contraction.
New business in the sector continued to rise but at the slowest pace since last July, as some firms reported reduced purchasing power among customers.
Firms' workforce numbers declined in March at the quickest pace since January 2023, ending a 19-month sequence of expansion, S&P Global said.
"Anecdotal evidence suggested that the drop in staffing levels was due to the non-replacement of voluntary leavers," S&P Global said.
Despite the overall slowdown, business confidence remained historically high, reaching its strongest level since May 2024. Service providers expressed optimism about future output, supported by plans to expand service lines and expectations of improved demand conditions.
A sister survey published on Tuesday showed that Russia's manufacturing sector experienced its sharpest contraction in nearly three years in March due to weak domestic and foreign demand.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
35 minutes ago
- Reuters
Fire erupts near Microsoft office in Israel's Beer Sheva, CNN reports
June 20 (Reuters) - Several fires were burning in a street in Israel's southern city of Beer Sheva, close to a tech park that houses a Microsoft (MSFT.O), opens new tab office, CNN reported on Friday. (This story has been refiled to correct the date and day in paragraph 1)


Reuters
4 hours ago
- Reuters
China keeps benchmark lending rates unchanged as expected in June
SHANGHAI, June 20 (Reuters) - China kept benchmark lending rates unchanged as expected on Friday, after Beijing rolled out sweeping monetary easing measures a month earlier to support the economy. The one-year loan prime rate (LPR) was kept at 3.00%, while the five-year LPR was unchanged at 3.50%. Most new and outstanding loans in China are based on the one-year LPR, while the five-year rate influences the pricing of mortgages. In a Reuters poll of 20 market participants conducted this week, all participants predicted no change to either of the two rates. Last month, China lowered LPRs for the first time since October, while major state banks lowered deposit rates as authorities cut borrowing costs to help buffer the economy from the impact of the Sino-U.S. trade war.


Scottish Sun
8 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Billionaire ‘supersperm' donor to leave vast fortune to his 106 children… and he's so rich they'll STILL get £160m each
THE billionaire founder of Telegram has made a new will - splitting his £17bn fortune among his 106 kids. Pavel Durov, 40, says he'll treat all his children equally, whether born via sperm donation or 'naturally'. 5 Pavel Durov is a Russian billionaire entrepreneur and the founder of Telegram Credit: East2West 5 The tech tycoon says he'll split his fortune among his 106 children Credit: East2West 5 Allegedly, three of the six kids that Durov fathered 'naturally' Credit: East2West The self-exiled Russian tycoon told Le Point magazine that none of his children will be getting their hands on the cash for the next 30 years. Durov said: 'I want them to live like normal people, to build their lives on their own, to learn to trust themselves, to be able to create - not to be dependent on a bank account.' Durov is the founder of Telegram messenger, which is known for its focus on privacy and encrypted messaging and boasts over a billion monthly active users worldwide. Dubbed the Mark Zuckerberg or Elon Musk of Russia, the tech tycoon has an estimated net worth of £17 billion. Read more world news VLAD'S BOMBS Bodies pulled from rubble as Vlad kills 28 & EU chief issues chilling warning He told the magazine he drafted his will because he feels threatened after refusing to share user data with the secret services of Russia and Western countries. Durov said: 'My work involves risks - defending freedoms earns you many enemies, including within powerful states. 'I want to protect my children, but also the company I created, Telegram. 'I want Telegram to always remain true to the values I stand for.' Discussing his alleged 106 kids, he said: 'I decided that my children will not have access to my fortune until a period of 30 years has passed, starting from today… 'I want to make it clear that I make no distinction between my children: there are those who were conceived naturally, and those born from my sperm donations. 'They are all my children and they will all have the same rights. 'I don't want them to tear each other apart after my death.' 5 Durov with girlfriend Yulia Vavilova Credit: East2West 5 Durov is currently under investigation Credit: East2West Telegram founder Pavel Durov faces four more days of questioning after arrest over 'failing to stop terrorism' on app Durov said he has six children, for whom he is the 'official father, with three different partners. 'The others were born from my anonymous donations. 'The [Russian] clinic where I started donating sperm 15 years ago - to help a friend - told me that over 100 babies have been conceived this way in 12 countries.' He added: 'I have a newborn son - I'm missing his first months. 'He doesn't even have a passport because I wasn't at his birth in Dubai.' Durov is also a French citizen and currently lives in France, where he is under investigation. He was arrested last year after flying from Azerbaijan to Paris with girlfriend Yulia Vavilova, 24, a gamer and crypto coach. Authorities claimed Telegram's lack of moderation, limited cooperation with law enforcement and features like disposable numbers and cryptocurrency make it an accomplice in drug trafficking, paedophilia and fraud. When Durov refused to hand over data on Ukrainian protesters to Russian security agencies, he was effectively forced to give up his company and move abroad in 2014. He said the French investigation into his affairs was 'completely absurd', adding, "Just because criminals use our messaging service among many others doesn't make those who run it criminals." He said: 'Telegram staff can't see or read user messages. 'That's why we've never revealed a single private message. 'If a court flags a user ID in a criminal case, we review metadata - IP address, phone number. That's it.' Telegram is widely used by both Russia and Ukrainian sides in the war.