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    1. Home
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    3. >Russian services sector stabilises in August as employment rises, PMI shows
    Finance

    Russian Services Sector Stabilises in August as Employment Rises, PMI Shows

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on September 3, 2025

    2 min read

    Last updated: January 22, 2026

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    Tags:SurveyGDPemployment opportunitiesfinancial sectoreconomic growth

    Quick Summary

    In August, Russia's services sector stabilized with employment rising at the fastest pace since February, despite slight declines in new orders and eased cost pressures.

    Russia's Services Sector Shows Signs of Stabilization in August

    Overview of Russia's Services Sector

    MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russia's services sector stabilised in August after two months of contraction, with employment growing at the fastest pace since February, S&P Global reported on Wednesday.

    Employment Trends

    The S&P Global Russia Services PMI Business Activity Index rose to 50.0 in August from 48.6 in July, indicating unchanged activity levels. A reading above 50.0 signals growth, while below indicates contraction.

    Demand and New Orders

    New orders continued to decline, but the pace was only slight, marking an improvement from July's sharper fall. Companies linked the decline to challenging financial conditions and customer hesitancy.

    Cost Pressures and Business Confidence

    "Although some companies continued to highlight subdued demand conditions, there were signs that a slower fall in new business contributed to a stabilisation in output," S&P Global said.

    Despite subdued demand, service providers increased staffing, anticipating future sales growth. The rise in employment, while modest, was nevertheless the quickest since February, helping firms manage their backlogs of work.

    Cost pressures eased, with input prices rising at the slowest rate in over five years, aided by favourable exchange rate movements. However, firms accelerated the pace of output charge inflation, passing higher costs onto customers.

    Business confidence remained positive but dipped to its second-lowest level since July 2023, with hopes pinned on stronger demand and market expansion.

    A sister survey last week showed that activity across Russia's manufacturing sector declined for the third month running in August, driven by falls in output and new orders.

    (Reporting by Gleb Bryanski; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

    Table of Contents

    • Overview of Russia's Services Sector
    • Employment Trends
    • Demand and New Orders
    • Cost Pressures and Business Confidence

    Key Takeaways

    • •Russian services sector stabilized in August after contraction.
    • •Employment grew at the fastest pace since February.
    • •New orders declined slightly, showing improvement.
    • •Cost pressures eased, with input prices rising slowly.
    • •Business confidence dipped but remains positive.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Russian services sector stabilises in August as employment rises, PMI shows

    1What was the PMI index for Russia's services sector in August?

    The S&P Global Russia Services PMI Business Activity Index rose to 50.0 in August from 48.6 in July, indicating unchanged activity levels.

    2How did employment change in Russia's services sector?

    Employment in the services sector grew at the fastest pace since February, despite subdued demand conditions.

    3What factors contributed to the decline in new orders?

    The decline in new orders was linked to challenging financial conditions and customer hesitancy, although the pace of decline was only slight.

    4What trends were observed regarding cost pressures?

    Cost pressures eased, with input prices rising at the slowest rate in over five years, aided by favorable exchange rate movements.

    5What is the outlook for business confidence in Russia's services sector?

    Business confidence remained positive but dipped to its second-lowest level since July 2023, with hopes pinned on stronger demand and market expansion.

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