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Activity among eurozone firms suffered its steepest contraction since June
2009, according to a survey.
The Markit Flash Eurozone Purchasing Managers' (PMI) Composite Output Index
fell to 45.9 in September, the lowest for 39 months, from 46.3 in August.
The composite figure combines services and manufacturing activity, and a figure
below 50 indicates contraction.
Markit said the results indicated the eurozone was heading back into recession.
The services PMI activity index fell from 47.2 to 46, but the manufacturing PMI
output index rose to 45.5 from 44.4 in August.
"The eurozone downturn gathered further momentum in September, suggesting that
the region suffered the worst quarter for three years," said Chris Williamson,
Markit's chief economist.
"The flash PMI is consistent with GDP contracting by 0.6% in the third quarter
and sending the region back into a technical recession."
France struggles
However, while there were falls in production and new orders across the
eurozone as a whole, Germany's rate of decline slowed "substantially".
"Services even saw a marginal upturn in activity for the first time since May,"
the report said.
But employment fell for the ninth consecutive month across the eurozone, with
French payroll numbers being cut at the fastest rate since November 2009.
The French composite PMI figure fell to 44.1 in September, the lowest reading
since April 2009, from 48.0 in August.
"France is really starting to struggle quite substantially," said Mr
Williamson.
"Its economy is suffering as its neighbours are seeing demand weaken and...
there are few signs of demand to stimulate growth in France."
Chinese manufacturing
Earlier, the flash PMI manufacturing measure for China had indicated another
fall in output in the sector, adding further to eurozone woes.
The survey of factory managers found that while the rate of decline had slowed,
manufacturing still fell in September for the 11th month in a row.
The HSBC flash China manufacturing PMI rose from 47.6 in August to 47.8 in
September.
China has given the go-head for infrastructure projects worth more than $150bn
( 93bn).