The numbers: Service-oriented companies that employ the vast majority of Americans registered the weakest growth in September in three years, adding to a cacaphony of reports showing a broad slowdown in the U.S. economy.
The Institute for Supply Management’s said its non-manufacturing index fell to 52.6 last month from 56.4 in August. Economists polled by Marketwatch had forecast a 55.3% reading.
Numbers over 50% indicates business conditions are getting better, but the index has fallen 8 points below its postrecession peak of 60.8% achieved last fall.
The lackluster results of the ISM’s services survey added to the angst on Wall Street after the research firm’s closely followed manufacturing index fell to a 10-year low earlier this week. Losses in the U.S. stock market deepened in Thursday trades.
Read: U.S. manufacturers experience worst month since Great Recession, ISM finds
What happened: Business production and new orders grew more slowly in September and employment levels were basically flat.
The index for production slid to 55.2% from 61.5%.
The employment gauge dropped to a five-year low of 50.4% — barely above the cutoff point that separates net hiring from net layoffs.
Altogether, 13 of the 17 industries tracked by ISM said their businesses were expanding. Just three of the 18 manufacturing industries in the firms’s survey indicated business was still expanding.
The ISM indexes are compiled from a survey of executives who order raw materials and other supplies for their companies. The gauge tends to rise or fall in tandem with the health of the economy.
Read: ADP says just 135,000 private-sector jobs created in September
Big picture: The pair of ISM surveys clearly point to a sharp loss of momentum in the U.S. economy. The trade war with China has hurt manufacturers, farmers and other large exporters while a slowing global economy has added to the malaise.
The service side of the economy is much larger than manufacturing, but the weakness in heavy industry appears to be spreading. Wall Street increasingly believes the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates again soon to try to help prop up the economy.
Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.74% the S&P 500 SPX, -0.55% took a big turn for the worse in Thursday trades. Stocks have nose dived this week on growing worries about the threat of recession after a batch of negative readings on the economy.
The 10-year Treasury yield TMUBMUSD10Y, -4.70% fell to 1.52%. The yield has sunk from a seven-year high of 3.23% last October.
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