TOKYO, Aug 3 Reuters Japan39;s service sector activity expanded at a slightly slower pace in July as new business growth eased and cost pressures remained high, but the overall performance of the sector stayed solid amid the fading impact of COVID19, a privatesector survey showed on Thursday.
The final au Jibun Bank Japan Services purchasing managers39; index PMI slipped to a seasonally adjusted 53.8 last month from 54.0 in June. The pace of growth in July eased to the slowest since January.
That compared with the flash reading of 53.9 and remained well above the 50threshold separating expansion from contraction for the 11th straight month. The index hit a record high in May.
Growth in business activity continued to soften from the record highs seen earlier in the year, but remained solid overall, said Usamah Bhatti, an economist at SP Global Market Intelligence.
Respondents of the survey cited some concern as new business growth slowed and outstanding business fell.
Inflationary pressures, which are also impacted by the weak yen, remain a key downside risk to private sector activity and the Japanese economy as a whole, he said.
The subindex for new business grew at the slowest pace in six months with some firms saying the loss of national travel subsidies weighed on their sales. Outstanding business slipped below the 50.0 threshold for the first time since July last year partly on a fall in new contracts and economic uncertainty.
Cost pressure for service…