Business activity in the eurozone expanded in March
for the ninth month in a row, a key indicator showed Monday, adding
to hopes that the currency bloc is on the road to economic recovery.
The London-based research group Markit said its closely watched
Purchasing Managers‘ Index (PMI) for the region‘s manufacturing and
service sectors clocked 53.2 - just slightly below the 32-month high
of 53.3 that it had hit a month earlier.
Analysts had expected a more pronounced slackening of pace to 53.1.
All readings above 50 indicate expansion in business activity.
"The ongoing upturn in business activity in March rounds off the
eurozone‘s best quarter since the second quarter of 2011," Markit
chief economist Chris Williamson said in a statement.
Particularly encouraging was the fact that France, the eurozone‘s
second-largest economy, saw growth return to its output and new
orders, the research group said.
"The improvement in the PMI to a two-and-a-half year high in March
adds hope that a fully fledged recovery will be evident in France by
the second quarter," Williamson said.
Read more: Eurozone business activity still on the upswing, key index shows | EUROPE ONLINE
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