Australian PMI: Manufacturing conditions improve again in September

The Australian Industry Group Australian Performance of Manufacturing Index (Australian PMI®) improved by 1.6 points to 54.7 in September, indicating faster growth across the manufacturing sector (readings above 50 points indicate contraction in activity, with the distance from 50 indicating the strength of the increase).

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Ai Group Chief Executive Innes Willox said: “The strengthening of the manufacturing sector over recent months continued to build in September with a further rise in the Australian PMI®. Performance was most robust in the large food & beverage and machinery & equipment sectors and was supported by positive contributions from the chemicals and building products sectors. These areas of improvement were partly offset by further slippages in performance among metal product manufacturers and producers from the diverse textiles, clothing, footwear, paper & printing product groups. While sales and production were down in September, the lifts in employment and new orders are encouraging pointers for coming months – particularly as the favourable impacts of income tax cuts, interest rate falls and the lower Australian dollar continue to build,” Mr Willox said.

Australian PMI®: Key Findings for September:

  • Four of the seven activity indexes in the Australian PMI® indicated accelerating and expanding conditions in September, while three indicated slowing but broadly stable conditions (see table below): employment (up 6.2 points to 57.6) and new orders (up 3.8 points to 57.1) were strong, but production (down 3.4 points to 49.8), sales (down 4.8 points to 49.5) and exports (down 6.1 points to 49.6) all weakened to be roughly stable.
  • Four of the six manufacturing sectors expanded in September (trend) with food & beverages (up 0.2 points to 59.2) still leading the way, followed by a resurgence in machinery & equipment (up 2.5 points to 56.7), which has benefited from increased demand from the mining and defence sectors.
  • The input prices index reported its highest reading of 2019 in September (up 5.7 points to 71.9), while the selling prices index fell back into contraction (down 3.8 points to 48.9). Some respondents reported increased import competition has restricted their ability to pass on input cost increases.
  • The average wages index rose by a further 3.5 points to 63.8 in September – the highest reading since October 2018, indicating a higher proportion of businesses are facing wage increases across manufacturing.

View all Economic Indicators

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®

54.7

1.6

52.4

Food & beverages

59.2

0.2

58.5

Production

49.8

-3.4

52.9

Machinery & Equipment

56.7

2.5

50.4

Employment

57.6

6.2

52.6

Metals products

41.3

0.7

45.0

New Orders

57.1

3.8

52.3

Petroleum, coal, chemicals & rubber products

53.2

0.3

53.0

Supplier Deliveries

53.6

0.7

52.6

Building, wood, furniture & other

51.2

-3.5

56.0

Finished Stocks

55.9

0.1

50.8

Textiles, clothing, footwear, paper & printing

41.8

-0.5

48.2

Exports

49.6

-6.1

52.8

Sales

49.5

-4.8

51.1

Input prices

71.9

5.7

69.3

Selling prices

48.9

-3.8

51.2

Average wages

63.8

3.5

60.4

Capacity utilisation (%)

77.3

-1.6

78.3

Results above 50 points indicate expansion. * All indexes for sectors in the Australian PMI® are reported in trend terms (Henderson 13-month filter).

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