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BRUSSELS: Eurozone business activity slumped at a faster pace in October, resulting in job losses, a closely watched Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) survey put out by S&P Global showed Tuesday.

The PMI score for October slumped to 46.5, lower than the revised 47.2 given for September. A figure under 50 indicates a contraction of business activity, while one over 50 suggests growth.

“In the eurozone, things are moving from bad to worse,” said Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist at the Hamburg Commercial Bank which partners with S&P for the PMI. “We wouldn’t be caught off guard to see a mild recession in the eurozone in the second half of this year,” he said. The lacklustre reading will add to pressure on the European Central Bank to pause its succession of interest rate hikes when its governing council next meets in December.

Although eurozone inflation is still far above the ECB’s two-percent target — driven up since last year by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — it is slowing, and economic headwinds are growing.

The PMI score has now dropped for five successive months, and was declining at the fastest pace since November 2020.

The data showed private-sector activity in the eurozone was shrinking at the fastest rate in a decade if figures from pandemic-affected months were stripped out. New orders were plummeting.

“Companies cut employment as a result, representing the first drop in headcounts since the lockdowns of early 2021,” S&P Global said in a statement giving the PMI survey result. Jobs in the manufacturing sector were being shed at the fastest rate since August 2020, and hiring in the services sector was close to a standstill.

The year-ahead outlook of purchasing managers questioned “remained among the weakest seen over the past year,” even if it there was a “marginal” uptick for October.

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