SERVICES PMIs
USA: Business activity growth weakens in December as inflation rates pick up
The headline S&P Global US Services PMI® Business Activity Index registered 52.5 in December to signal solid growth of activity and extending the current period of continuous expansion to just under three years. However, the index was down from 54.1 in November and thereby signaling the slowest growth for eight months.
Demand conditions cooled somewhat in December, with growth of new work faltering. Overall, inflows of new business rose only marginally and to the weakest degree in 20 months. Panelists commented on a degree of uncertainty in market demand, with client budgets and spending reportedly squeezed.
Tariffs remained a source of instability, especially in relation to foreign demand. Latest data showed new export business declined in December for a second time in the past three months. Although modest, the rate of contraction was the steepest since last May.
Meanwhile, employment volumes fell negligibly in December, ending a nine-month sequence of continuous growth. Panelists noted cost concerns, budget constraints and the downturn in demand growth as reasons for the lackluster trend in employment. Some capacity constraints were however evident, with backlogs of work rising modestly and for the tenth month in a row.
Highlighting an ongoing squeeze in company budgets at the end of 2025, input price inflation accelerated during December to a seven-month high and remained well above its historical trend level. Service providers continued to report that costs were being driven higher by tariffs, and a general increase in supplier charges. Labor related expenses were also reported to be a source of cost inflation.
Higher input prices fed through to an increase in selling charges over the month. Overall, the rate of inflation picked up to its highest level since August as firms sought to offset the impact on margins of higher operating expenses.
Finally, expectations about the year ahead were again positive overall during December, albeit a little softer than in November and therefore still below trend. Tariffs and broader uncertainty over government policies continued to weigh on sentiment. Where growth is forecast, hopes of lower interest rates, business expansion plans and new product launches were all seen as sources of growth for the year ahead.
Expansion in December rounds of solid quarter of growth for eurozone economy
The seasonally adjusted HCOB Eurozone Composite PMI® Output Index fell from November’s 30-month high of 52.8 to 51.5 in December. Despite the slowdown in growth (which was signalled by the headline index posting above, but closer to the 50.0 mark), it meant that the average for the final three months of 2025 (52.3) was the highest since the second quarter of 2023.
December’s softer expansion at the aggregate level was broadly reflective of the national data as growth momentum was lost in most of the eurozone constituents with Composite PMI data available. The sole exception to this was Spain, where private sector business activity rose at a sharper pace than in November.
France stagnated at the end of the year, failing to maintain growth after November’s renewed expansion, while Italy only managed a marginal upturn that was its slowest in nearly a year. Germany – which was key driver of the eurozone’s solid growth rates earlier in the fourth quarter – likewise saw a curtailment of its expansion at the end of 2025.
New business received by private sector firms in the eurozone rose in December, marking five consecutive months of demand growth. That said, the upturn slowed and was the weakest since last September. A faster decrease in new factory orders combined with a softer increase in sales by services companies. There were fewer wins in export markets, with new business from non-domestic clients falling to the greatest extent since March 2025.
Weaker demand pressures allowed eurozone firms to make faster inroads into outstanding work. Backlogged orders fell at the quickest pace in three months during December. Businesses in both monitored sectors recorded clearances to work-in-hand. Private sector employment continued to increase, with the rate of job creation even ticking slightly higher from that seen in November. Growth in workforce numbers was only marginal, however, amid further cutbacks in the manufacturing sector.
Meanwhile, input cost inflation accelerated to a nine-month high as companies in both monitored sectors saw pressures intensify. The extent to which output charges rose was nonetheless unchanged from that seen in November and therefore the joint-weakest since October 2024 (tied also with May 2025).
Fed’s Miran Says More Than Full Point of Cuts Needed in 2026
(…) “I think it’s very difficult to argue that policy is about neutral. I think policy is clearly restrictive and holding the economy back,” Miran said Tuesday during an appearance on the Fox Business Network. “I think that well over 100 basis points of cuts are going to be justified this year.” (…)
The central bank’s benchmark is currently within a 3.5% to 3.75% band, and the estimates of the neutral level among the 19 policymakers on the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee range from 2.6% to 3.9%, though the median estimate is 3%. (…)
BTW, US real GDP was +4.3% in Q3.
BTW #2: November CPI came much lower than expected at ~2.7% YoY, showing significant moderation but remaining above the Fed’s 2% target.
But Truflation’s independent US inflation indexes (both CPI and PCE) have sharply decelerated since mid-December to hit the 2% target on Dec 30, showing further downtrends in 2026 in food, gasoline, and housing inflation, especially in softening rents.
Truflation’s data don’t jibe with the PMI surveys: “Higher input prices fed through to an increase in selling charges over the month. Overall, the rate of inflation picked up to its highest level since August as firms sought to offset the impact on margins of higher operating expenses.”
Supreme Court Sets Friday for Opinions Amid Tariffs Watch
The US Supreme Court scheduled Friday as an opinion day, indicating that date will be the first chance for a ruling on President Donald Trump’s global tariffs.
The court never says in advance which decisions are ready for release, only that rulings in argued cases are possible when the justices take the bench at 10:00 a.m. Washington time. A tariff decision is a possibility given the court’s expedited handling of the case so far. (…)
Eurozone Inflation Falls to ECB Target The result underpins views that ECB monetary policy will remain stable in the near future
Services prices increased at a slightly slower pace following three straight months of faster rises, indicating some key price pressures in the currency area are dissipating.
The data comes on the heels of lower-than-expected inflation prints on Tuesday from Germany and France, the eurozone’s two largest economies.
After the central bank held the deposit rate at 2% at its last meeting on Dec. 18, President Christine Lagarde reiterated that policy remains in a “good place.”
The central bank sees the inflation rate averaging at 1.9% in 2026 after 2.1% in 2025, hovering a little under target until averaging at 2% in 2028. Slowing inflation comes even though the ECB recently upgraded its growth forecasts. (…)
The FT adds:
Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, fell to 2.3 per cent, compared with 2.4 per cent in November.
The closely watched figure for services inflation — a gauge for domestic price pressures that has remained well above the ECB’s 2 per cent target for more than three years — fell by 0.1 percentage points to 3.4 per cent, after rising to its highest level since April in November. (…)
AI CORNER
The data center rebellion is here, and it’s reshaping the political landscape As the buildout of AI infrastructure alarms communities, it is fast emerging as a potent electoral issue across the political divide.
(…) From Archibald, Pennsylvania, to Page, Arizona, tech firms are seeking to plunk down data centers in locations that sometimes are not zoned for such heavy industrial uses, within communities that had not planned for them. These supersize data centers can use more energy than entire cities and drain local water supplies.
Anger over the perceived trampling of communities by Silicon Valley has entered the national political conversation and could affect voters of all political persuasions in this year’s midterm elections. (…)
The grassroots blowback comes from deep red states as much as from left-wing groups such as the Democratic Socialists of America, which have helped draw hundreds of residents to hearings in Arizona, Indiana and Maryland.
Even Energy Secretary Chris Wright warned data center developers that they are losing control of the narrative. “In rural America right now, where data centers are being built, everyone’s already angry because their electricity prices have risen a lot,” he told energy executives assembled in Washington for the North American Gas Forum last month. “‘I don’t want them in my state’ is a common viewpoint.” (…)
The White House frames the data center boom as beneficial, saying in a statement that it will lead to big investments in infrastructure and boost manufacturing. But the administration is also aware some communities oppose them.
“Communities know what’s best for them, and the Administration is clear that local infrastructure decisions remain with states and localities,” the statement said.
Many local politicians are yielding to community pressure and rejecting data centers. Between April and June, more projects were blocked or delayed than during the previous two years combined, according to Data Center Watch, a tracking project by the nonpartisan research firm 10a Labs. Some $98 billion in planned development was derailed in a single quarter.
Last month, a group of Senate Democrats launched an investigation into the role data centers play in increasing electricity prices.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) last month called for a moratorium on data center construction, warning that the tech firms are draining scarce energy and water reserves and pushing the cost onto everyday Americans in pursuit of AI technologies that threaten to displace millions from the workforce. (…)
Even Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) is championing an AI “bill of rights” to enshrine local governments’ power to stop data center construction and prohibit utilities from pushing AI infrastructure costs onto residents. The break between Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Georgia) and Trump was driven in part by her vocal criticism of his AI build-out push.
The industry has struggled to quell the concerns. In Chandler, Arizona, former senator Kyrsten Sinema (I), co-founder of the AI Infrastructure Coalition, implored city officials to get on board with a large proposed project or risk the federal government pushing it through without city input.
The city council rejected the project unanimously. (…)
“People are understandably asking how they will benefit,” said Chris Lehane, chief global affairs officer at OpenAI, which has won initial local approval for some of the country’s largest data center projects. He said companies need to listen to communities and make sure they are sharing in the economic gains. “You need to be on the ground, having these conversations. It is a journey.” (…)
It’s a journey that some local officials are willing to go on because the projects generate construction jobs and boost revenue for schools.
“We’re trying to work through this,” said Mike Carter, the city manager in Sand Springs. “This would probably be one of our major employers. It would almost certainly become the dominant part of our tax base. … When you can surpass Walmart, which is right now the biggest taxpayer in our community, there is a big incentive to look at this.” (…)
It is cold comfort to many residents of the rural community, where the data center would industrialize a landscape now defined by the ranches that drew them there. (…)
(…) “There’s going to be issues around semiconductor supplies, and it’s going to affect everyone,” Wonjin Lee, president and head of global marketing, said in an interview. “Prices are going up even as we speak. Obviously, we don’t want to convey that burden to the consumers, but we’re going to be at a point where we have to actually consider repricing our products.” (…)
The AI data center buildout boom has brought about unprecedented demand for high-bandwidth memory, a lucrative product that’s lifted Samsung and fellow memory maker SK Hynix Inc.’s stock prices to new highs, and constrained supply lines for other uses. (…)
OpenAi Watch
Can anyone catch up with Google in the AI race? That question came to mind on Monday, after Reuters quoted Samsung’s co-CEO talking about his plans to double the number of mobile devices running Galaxy AI, Samsung’s branded AI features backed by Google’s Gemini AI technology, to 800 million this year. (That’s separate to Samsung phones that have the Gemini consumer chatbot preinstalled.)
And the two companies are not just collaborating on phones: Samsung plans to unveil Gemini-powered AI features for kitchen appliances at CES this week. They’re also working together on smart glasses featuring Gemini. Beyond Samsung, Google is also installing Gemini on TV sets running its Google TV software—it’s previewing some new features at CES this week.
But phones are key. This is where Google may soon have an unbeatable lead. Samsung has the top share of the global smartphone market, although some analysts have predicted Apple will take that spot once the final numbers for 2025 are tabulated.
That tussle doesn’t matter much to Google, as it is expected to negotiate a deal to help power Apple’s Siri assistant on iPhones. You might say Google’s AI has locked up the mobile market, at least for the moment. Whether it proves permanent is hard to say, as Google’s arrangement with Samsung is likely for a few years only and it hasn’t yet finalized a deal with Apple.
Even with that qualification, this is a good reminder of why OpenAI is so keen to launch some kind of AI device, and why Meta is putting so much effort into AI for its smart glasses. Both companies are hoping to supplant phones.
They might succeed, but don’t bet on it. In the meantime, Google’s Gemini models will be powering AI features on many different outlets. That should mean Google is able to improve how the models function on a variety of tasks, simply because of the data it gets from interacting with so many consumers. And that could make Google’s models even more attractive to potential business partners.
What about money? Google is presumably charging Samsung for use of its models, although Google may have been keen enough for the business to discount its fee.
Indeed, one of the revelations in an antitrust court hearing last year is that Google paid “enormous” amounts of money to have the Gemini consumer chatbot preinstalled on Samsung and other phones running Google’s Android software. But even without the chatbot, Google features like Gemini Live (through which you can talk to Gemini about what you see on your phone screen) will be available via Galaxy AI, according to this Samsung description of the technology.
That’s valuable for raising consumer awareness of Gemini and potentially giving Google a bigger audience to sell ads to. OpenAI’s ChatGPT may be the only AI the average person knows about right now, but Google’s AI is looking to become increasingly ubiquitous.
Why an OpenAi Watch? The “AI” or “Aïe, Aïe, Aïe” Year
CES 2026
Jansen Huang’s presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrMnOp2N9Kw
BTW:
Humanoid Robot Companies Exhibiting at CES 2026: 26 Chinese, 5 American:
If you missed it: Bots On The Ground (Robotics)
