The U.S. services sector expanded at a slower pace in June 2026, with the Institute for Supply Management’s Services PMI easing to 54 percent from 54.5 percent in May, while the sector’s Employment Index rebounded into growth for the first time in four months. The mixed reading arrives as investors weigh the path of Federal Reserve policy ahead of upcoming inflation data.
Key Takeaways
- The ISM Services PMI registered 54 percent in June 2026, down 0.5 percentage point from May and marking a 24th consecutive month of expansion.
- The Employment Index climbed 3.3 percentage points to 51.2 percent, its first expansion reading in four months.
- The Business Activity and New Orders indexes each slowed by more than two points but held in growth territory.
- The Prices Index fell to 67.7 percent, its lowest level since February, signaling some easing in cost pressures.
How the Services Sector Performed in June
The Institute for Supply Management reported that its Services PMI slipped to 54 percent in June, a decline of half a percentage point from May’s 54.5 percent, keeping the index in expansion territory for a 24th straight month. Readings above 50 percent indicate that the services economy, which accounts for the bulk of U.S. output, is generally growing.
Steve Miller, chair of the ISM Services Business Survey Committee, noted that all four subindexes making up the composite figure sat above their 12-month moving averages, with that average rising to 53.1 percent for a sixth consecutive month. The headline number landed close to analyst forecasts near 54.2 percent. The Business Activity Index dropped 2.3 points to 55.4 percent, and the New Orders Index fell 2.2 points to 55.1 percent, pointing to softer momentum even as demand held up. Fourteen of 18 services industries reported growth during the month.
Why the Employment Index Rebounded
The clearest bright spot in the June report was hiring. The Employment Index rose 3.3 percentage points to 51.2 percent, expanding for the first time in four months after a reading of 47.9 percent in May. According to ISM data, the increase was the largest for the employment gauge since 2024, and it helped offset the pullback in business activity and new orders.
Nine of the 18 tracked services industries, representing more than 58 percent of U.S. gross domestic product, reported higher employment levels in June. Steve Miller pointed to broad confidence that measured hiring is again warranted to support activity, and attributed part of the gain to hiring tied to World Cup preparations in the United States. The rebound suggests that services employers, after months of caution, see enough demand stability to add staff selectively.
How June’s Readings Compare to May
The following table summarizes the movement across the four ISM Services PMI subindexes between May and June 2026.
| Index | May 2026 | June 2026 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Services PMI (composite) | 54.5% | 54.0% | -0.5 |
| Business Activity | 57.7% | 55.4% | -2.3 |
| New Orders | 57.3% | 55.1% | -2.2 |
| Employment | 47.9% | 51.2% | +3.3 |
| Supplier Deliveries | 55.2% | 54.4% | -0.8 |
| Prices | 71.3% | 67.7% | -3.6 |
What the June Report Signals for Prices and Supply Chains
Cost pressures showed signs of moderating. The Prices Index fell 3.6 points to 67.7 percent, its lowest level since February and its first move below 70 percent in four months, though it remained in expansion. Steve Miller linked part of the relief to energy, noting that West Texas Intermediate crude oil dropped below $70 per barrel in late June for the first time since February, a decline of more than 30 percent from recent highs.
Supply constraints did not disappear, however. The number of commodities reported in short supply rose from five in May to nine in June, and all of the newly scarce items were tied to data center construction, reflecting sustained demand from artificial intelligence infrastructure buildouts. The Backlog of Orders Index reached its second-highest level in nearly four years, which ISM interpreted as a sign that supply chains are stabilizing while business activity holds firm.
Why the Data Matters for Federal Reserve Policy
The services report feeds into a closely watched debate over interest rates. At its June 16-17 meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee held the federal funds rate at a range of 3.50 to 3.75 percent, and its updated projections lifted the median year-end 2026 estimate to 3.8 percent, a shift that markets read as leaning toward tighter policy rather than cuts. The May Consumer Price Index rose 4.2 percent from a year earlier, the highest reading in three years, driven largely by energy costs.
The June employment picture complicates the outlook. While the ISM services survey showed a hiring rebound, the government’s June payrolls report pointed to slower job creation across the broader economy, sharpening questions about whether labor demand is cooling. Traders are now focused on the July CPI release and the July 28-29 FOMC meeting for signals on whether inflation momentum eases enough to reopen the door to rate reductions later in the year.
The June ISM Services PMI paints a services economy still expanding but losing some speed, with steadier hiring and cooling prices giving the Federal Reserve fresh data to parse before its next policy decision.
FAQs
What is the ISM Services PMI? The ISM Services PMI is a monthly index compiled by the Institute for Supply Management from surveys of purchasing and supply executives. A reading above 50 percent indicates the services sector is expanding, while a reading below 50 percent indicates contraction.
What was the June 2026 Services PMI reading? The index registered 54 percent in June 2026, down 0.5 percentage point from May’s 54.5 percent. It marked the 24th consecutive month of expansion.
Why did the Employment Index rebound? The Employment Index rose to 51.2 percent, its first expansion in four months, helped by broad confidence in demand and hiring tied to World Cup preparations in the United States.
Did price pressures ease in June? Yes. The Prices Index fell to 67.7 percent, its lowest reading since February, partly reflecting a drop in crude oil prices below $70 per barrel late in the month.
How could this affect Federal Reserve decisions? The report gives policymakers mixed signals of slowing activity alongside firmer hiring and cooler prices, which factor into rate deliberations ahead of the July 28-29 FOMC meeting.
When is the next Services PMI released? The Institute for Supply Management is scheduled to release July 2026 data on August 5, 2026.









