Australian PMI®: Manufacturing recovery slows in November

The Australian Industry Group Australian Performance of Manufacturing Index (Australian PMI®) slumped 7.0 points to 51.3 in November, indicating slower growth in the manufacturing sector. This is the lowest result since October 2017 but still extends the index's period of uninterrupted growth to 26 months (readings above 50 indicate expansion 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 recovery in the Australian manufacturing sector slowed in November, with the Australian PMI® falling to its lowest level in a little over a year. Despite this slowing, manufacturing extended its run of uninterrupted growth to 26 months. Food and beverages manufacturers reported higher production in the lead up to Christmas and respondents in other sectors reported high levels of activity related to infrastructure and construction projects, particularly in Victoria. "While it is too early to say that winter is coming for the sector, there are clouds on the horizon with new orders falling into contraction. Drought conditions in New South Wales and Queensland are now having an adverse impact on input costs and sales for some manufacturers and uncertainty over the direction of energy prices and policy is weighing heavily on the more energy-intensive parts of the sector," Mr Willox said.

Australian PMI®: Key Findings for November:

  • The Australian PMI® has indicated positive conditions (results above 50 points) for 26 consecutive months – the longest run of recovery or expansion since 2005.
  • Five of the seven activity indexes in the Australian PMI® expanded in November (see table below), while employment was broadly stable (down 3.2 points to 49.4). The new orders index fell into contraction (down 10.1 points to 48.7) for the first time since September 2016, suggesting tougher conditions may be ahead for manufacturers in some sectors.
  • Five of the eight manufacturing sectors expanded in November (trend data*), with the remaining three broadly stable. Growth was led by the printing & recorded media (up 4.6 points to 67.6), food & beverages (down 0.9 points to 57.9) and non-metallic minerals (mainly building and construction-related products – down 2.0 points to 74.9) sectors.
  • The input prices index rose 2.2 points to 75.0 in November, with food & beverages manufacturers reporting higher prices for raw agricultural inputs and high energy input costs continuing across other sectors. The wages sub-index fell back further from September's record high, dropping 8.2 points to 58.8.
  • The manufacturing selling price sub-index dropped to its lowest level of 2018, falling 6.7 points to 50.4 in November. This indicates very modest price increases for manufacturing customers, with the upward trend evident throughout this year appearing to have halted.

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®

51.3

-7.0

57.2

Food & beverages

57.9

-0.9

58.9

Production

51.8

-9.8

58.4

Machinery & Equipment

50.2

-1.0

56.1

Employment

49.4

-3.2

54.7

Metals products

50.9

-0.3

55.3

New Orders

48.7

-10.1

58.3

Chemicals

54.5

1.1

59.5

Deliveries

54.4

-6.5

58.4

Non-metallic minerals

74.9

-2.0

68.0

Stocks

57.4

1.4

53.6

TCF, furniture & other

49.9

0.5

47.0

Exports

50.8

-4.3

53.8

Wood & paper

56.8

-3.6

55.7

Sales

52.6

-7.2

56.4

Printing & recorded media

67.6

4.6

53.7

Input prices

75.0

2.2

71.0

Selling prices

50.4

-6.7

54.0

Average wages

58.8

-8.2

61.5

Capacity utilisation (%)

79.5

-0.8

79.0

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

/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.