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Australian PMI: Manufacturers Close Financial Year On A High

Published 02/07/2018, 12:31 pm
Updated 04/06/2018, 07:30 pm

The Australian Industry Group Australian Performance of Manufacturing Index (Australian PMI) ended the financial year on a high note, down just 0.1 point to 57.4 to record a 21st month of continuous expansion (readings above 50 indicate expansion in activity, with the distance from 50 indicating the strength of the increase).

Ai Group Chief Executive Innes Willox said: "Manufacturing production, employment, exports and sales were all higher in June, driving the Australian PMI to its longest run of expansion in well over a decade. Growth was evident across the manufacturing sector including in the large food & beverages, metal products and machinery & equipment sub-sectors even though the drought conditions in some parts of the country are flowing along supply chains into these sub-sectors. With new orders continuing to come in at growing levels, the immediate outlook is for further growth in production and employment. As to the longer term, manufacturers, particularly those in more energy intensive segments of the sector, remain concerned about ongoing uncertainty over energy policy and its dampening impact on the investment needed to ease price pressures," Mr Willox said.

Australian PMI: Key Findings for June:

  • The current run of expanding or stable conditions (21 months) for the Australian PMI is the longest since 2005, with the longest positive run being 50 continuous months from July 2001 to July 2005.
  • Six of the seven activity sub-indexes in the Australian PMI expanded in June (see table below). The new orders sub-index defied an end-of-year reduction in new orders cited by some respondents to remain solidly positive (down 4.8 points to 57.6) while sales also grew strongly (up 10.8 points to 61.2).
  • Employment remained buoyant (up 2.0 points to 58.1) and has been stable or expanding since December 2016. This builds on the manufacturing jobs growth shown by ABS employment data, with manufacturing employment in May at its highest level since August 2012 (trend).
  • Seven of the eight manufacturing sub-sectors expanded in June (trend data*), with the textiles, clothing, furniture & 'other' manufacturing sub-sector's stable conditions the only exception (down 1.0 point to 49.3). Sub-sectors providing manufactured goods for civil engineering, residential and commercial construction projects continue to report very strong levels of activity: petroleum, coal & chemicals (down 0.9 points to 62.3); metal products (down 1.8 points to 56.2); machinery & equipment (down 0.3 points to 58.9); and non-metallic minerals (down 0.4 points to 63.4).
  • The input prices sub-index increased by 0.3 points to 70.3 in June, reflecting continued high energy input costs in a number of sub-sectors, while wages lifted slightly by 0.4 points to 58.8. The selling prices sub-index rose 0.7 points to 55.8, indicating more modest price increases for manufacturing customers in June.

Seasonally adjusted

Index this month

Change from last month

12 month average

Index this month

Change from last month

12 month average

Australian PMI®

57.4

-0.1

57.3

Exports

52.9

0.4

52.7

Production

58.9

3.2

58.6

Sales

61.2

10.8

55.4

New Orders

57.6

-4.8

59.2

Input Prices

70.3

0.3

68.4

Employment

58.1

2.0

55.6

Selling Prices

55.8

0.7

52.3

Inventories (stocks)

50.5

3.5

52.2

Average Wages

58.8

0.4

59.7

Supplier Deliveries

58.0

-1.2

56.5

Cap. Utilisation (%)

79.1

3.0

77.7


* All sub-sector indexes in the Australian PMI are reported in trend terms (Henderson 13-month filter), so as to better identify the trends in these volatile monthly data.

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