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Australian PMI®: Manufacturing stumbles in June

The Australian Industry Group Australian Performance of Manufacturing Index (Australian PMI®) fell 3.3 points to 49.4 in June, signalling the first mild contraction in manufacturing conditions and the lowest result since August 2016 (readings below 50 points indicate contraction in activity, with the distance from 50 indicating the strength of the decrease).

Ai Group Chief Executive Innes Willox said: “Australia’s manufacturers reported the weakest conditions in almost three years in June. While the pace of growth has eased over the past year, the combination of the housing construction downturn, a slowing in engineering construction, continuing drought conditions and slow income growth across the broader economy caught up with the manufacturing sector and dragged it into negative territory as the financial year drew to a close. While production edged ahead in June, both employment and new orders were flat at best and pressure on margins intensified as sell prices eased and input costs and wages continued to rise. Manufacturers will be hoping that the combination of lower interest rates and personal income tax cuts translate into higher domestic demand over coming months. This reinforces arguments in support of the additional tax measures introduced in the last Federal Budget,” Mr Willox said.

Australian PMI®: Key Findings for June:

  • The mild contraction in the Australian PMI® in June (down 3.3 points to 49.4) brings to an end 33 consecutive months of stable or positive results (50 points or higher) since August 2016.
  • Of the seven activity indexes in the Australian PMI®, only production (up 0.7 points to 51.9) and exports (up 2.8 points to 53.1) remained in expansion in June. The employment (down 5.5 points to 50.1), new orders (down 2.5 points to 49.8) and sales (down 0.8 points to 50.8) indices were broadly stable, while supplier deliveries (down 6.5 points to 47.1) and finished stocks (down 6.8 points to 44.0) contracted – possibly due to end-of-financial-year stock clearances.
  • Three of the six manufacturing sectors expanded in June (trend), led once again by food & beverages (down 0.4 points to 60.6) and building materials, wood & furniture (up 1.2 points to 62.0). The metals products sector fell deeper into contraction (down 1.7 points to 40.8), as did the small but diverse textiles, clothing, footwear, paper & printing products sector (down 3.2 points to 44.1).
  • The input prices index remained elevated in June, easing slightly by 0.9 points to 67.4, with machinery & equipment manufacturers in particular reporting increasing costs for high-value imported components due to the low Australian dollar.
  • The selling prices index fell 2.8 points to 49.6 in June, indicating broadly stable or marginally falling selling prices. This month’s result is the first below the critical 50-point threshold (separating expansion from contraction) since December 2018.
  • The average wages index rebounded by 4.2 points to 59.7 in June, indicating a faster rate of wage increases across the manufacturing sector. This comes ahead of the 1 July 3.0% minimum wage rise, with the ABS estimating 21% of manufacturing employees have their wages set only by Awards (which are linked to the minimum wage).

Seasonally adjusted

Index this month

Change from last month

12 month average

Trend

Index this month

Change from last month

12 month average

Australian PMI®

49.4

-3.3

53.0

Food & beverages

60.6

-0.4

58.8

Production

51.9

0.7

53.9

Machinery & Equipment

47.2

0.6

50.3

Employment

50.1

-5.5

52.4

Metals products

40.8

-1.7

48.3

New Orders

49.8

-2.5

52.9

Petroleum, coal, chemicals & rubber products

54.7

0.8

53.5

Supplier Deliveries

47.1

-6.5

53.8

Building, wood, furniture & other

62.0

1.2

57.8

Finished Stocks

44.0

-6.8

50.7

Textiles, clothing, footwear, paper & printing

44.1

-3.2

48.2

Exports

53.1

2.8

53.5

Sales

50.8

-0.8

52.0

Input prices

67.4

-0.9

70.5

Selling prices

49.6

-2.5

52.1

Average wages

59.7

4.2

61.0

Capacity utilisation (%)

76.7

-2.1

78.1

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