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US Q2 2026 ISM Services PMI Falls to 53.6; High Inflation Pressure and Employment Weakness Spark Market Concerns

2026-05-06

Core Overview: The latest data for the US Q2 2026 ISM Services PMI recorded 53.6, a slight pullback from the previous Q1 2026 value of 54.0, and slightly below the market consensus expectation of 53.7. Despite the cooling in the data, this marks the 22nd consecutive month that the US services sector has remained firmly in the expansion zone above the 50 boom-or-bust line, demonstrating that the sector still retains a certain degree of resilience in the face of global geopolitical conflicts.

Key Components: The performance of key components showed significant divergence. The "New Orders Index," which represents future demand momentum, plunged by 7.1 percentage points in a single month to 53.5, marking the largest single-month decline in the current economic cycle. On the other hand, although the "Employment Index" rebounded slightly to 48.0 from 45.2 in the previous month, it remains deeply entrenched in contraction territory for the second consecutive month; meanwhile, the "Prices Index" remained stubbornly high, flat at 70.7, maintaining the highest level since October 2022.

Deep Attribution: The core driving force behind this data change comes from the ripple effects of Middle East geopolitics. Verified Investing and BMO economists pointed out that the recent Iran conflict has led to soaring crude oil and fuel costs, significantly pushing up the operating costs of the services sector, and businesses will face structural inflation pressures lasting for months. Furthermore, the ISM survey also showed that because businesses pulled forward orders in March to avoid price hikes, this month's new orders saw a substantial pullback, and under the pressure of high costs, businesses have become more conservative in their labor recruitment decisions.

Outlook and Risks: Looking ahead, in the short term (1-2 months), high energy costs and profit compression will continue to take effect, and stubbornly high gasoline prices may suppress discretionary spending by the public during the upcoming peak travel season, further stifling the demand momentum in the services sector. In the medium term (3-6 months), as both manufacturing and services PMIs simultaneously flash warning signs of "high prices, shrinking employment," market concerns about "stagflation" are rapidly escalating. If subsequent CPI data fails to decline significantly, the Federal Reserve's (Fed) room for interest rate cuts in 2026 could be severely compressed, thereby triggering the risk of market valuation adjustments.

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