The seasonally adjusted S&P Global Russia Services PMI Business Activity Index registered 51.1 in September, up from 49.9 in August, the company reported on October 5.

“The rise in output was historically subdued, but growth nonetheless reportedly stemmed from a further uptick in client demand and new orders. September saw a fourth successive monthly upturn in new orders. Greater client demand was reportedly driven by the acquisition of new customers, but was supported mainly by the domestic market as new export orders fell again. Foreign customer demand decreased at a sharp pace that accelerated notably from August,” S&P said in a note. Any number above the no-change 50 mark represents an expansion. (chart)

The growth in the services sector comes on top of an even stronger expansion in manufacturing as Russian firms scramble to replace imports that have disappeared from the market.

The Russian manufacturing sector signalled a modest improvement in operating conditions in September, according to S&P Global, which put the seasonally adjusted S&P Global Russia Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) at 52.0, rising from 51.7 in August. “The latest data signalled a modest upturn in the health of the Russian manufacturing sector, and one that was the fastest for three and a half years,” the report said on October 4.

As covered by bne IntelliNews, previously in August the manufacturing PMI showed the strongest improvement in the health of the sector since the launch of Russia's military invasion of Ukraine. But despite a renewed expansion in manufacturing production, broadly unchanged levels of output at service providers weighed on the overall expansion.

Taken together, the services and manufacturing PMI for September in the Composite PMI Output Index posted 51.5 in September, up from 50.4 in August, to signal another monthly upturn in private sector business activity.

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