The Australian Industry Group Australian Performance of Manufacturing Index (Australian PMI®) increased slightly by 0.2 points to 48.3 in December, marking two consecutive months of contraction in the Australian PMI® for the first time since mid-2015 (readings below 50 points indicate contraction in activity, with the distance from 50 indicating the strength of the contraction).

With new orders again in negative territory in December and trending down since March, the current weak conditions for manufacturers are likely to continue into the New Year, with the strong food & beverages sector a notable exception.

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Ai Group Chief Executive Innes Willox said: "2019 closed on a disappointing note for Australian manufacturing with production and employment both weaker in December. The main bright spots were the food & beverages sector, which extended the upward trend recorded by the Australian PMI® since 2012, and manufactured exports which are benefitting from the competitive level of the Australian dollar relative to other currencies. The machinery & equipment and chemicals sectors remained broadly stable in the month while other manufacturing sectors contracted. Producers linked to construction and housing suffered from the entrenched slump in these areas of activity with drought and adverse weather also taking their toll. The downturn in manufacturing recorded in November and December is a clear warning of the growing risk of a more broad-based slackening of an economy already in the slow lane. It adds weight to the view that serious consideration should be given to further fiscal stimulus," Mr Willox said.


Australian PMI®: Key Findings for December:

  • Four of the seven activity indices in the Australian PMI® contracted in December, with the recent weakness in new orders continuing, if at a milder rate of contraction (up 1.6 points to 48.8). Employment dropped further into negative territory (down 1.3 points to 46.0) and was joined by the finished stocks index (down 8.2 points to 44.4). More positively, supplier deliveries (up 6.8 points to 52.1) and exports (up 4.2 points to 54.0) rose into expansion.
  • Among the six manufacturing sectors in the Australian PMI®, only food & beverages expanded in December (up 0.6 points to 61.8) while machinery & equipment (down 1.0 points to 50.4) and the chemicals sector (down 0.9 points to 49.3) were broadly stable. The metals products (up 0.6 points to 45.0), building materials, wood & other manufacturing (down 3.4 points to 38.1) and TCF, paper & printing (down 0.1 points to 41.6) sectors all contracted again in December (trend).
  • Manufacturing businesses selling products to the construction sector reported reduced demand as a result of a downturn in residential construction activity and weather-related disruption.
  • The input prices index fell a further 5.1 points to 58.9 – the lowest result since April 2016 – indicating manufacturing input price increases slowed markedly in December, but selling prices fell back into contraction (down 3.7 points to 47.5).
  • The average wages index fell a further 1.7 points to 55.1 in December, indicating wages rose at a slower pace than in November.

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®

48.3

0.2

50.6

Food & beverages

61.8

0.6

53.5

Production

48.7

-1.0

51.4

Machinery & Equipment

50.4

-1.0

49.7

Employment

46.0

-1.3

48.8

Metals products

45.0

0.6

47.5

New Orders

48.8

1.6

51.3

Petroleum, coal, chemicals & rubber products

49.3

-0.9

51.4

Supplier Deliveries

52.1

6.8

51.0

Building, wood, furniture & other

38.1

-3.4

50.3

Finished Stocks

44.4

-8.2

49.6

Textiles, clothing, footwear, paper & printing

41.6

-0.1

46.6

Exports

54.0

4.2

50.1

       

Sales

50.2

1.0

49.3

       

Input prices

58.9

-5.1

67.7

       

Selling prices

47.5

-3.7

48.1

       

Average wages

55.1

-1.7

59.1

       

Capacity utilisation (%)

78.1

3.5

73.7

       

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

Background: The Australian Industry Group Australian Performance of Manufacturing Index (Australian PMI®) is a national composite index calculated from a weighted mix of the diffusion indices for production, new orders, deliveries, inventories and employment. An Australian PMI® reading above 50 points indicates that manufacturing activity is expanding; below 50, that it is declining. The distance from 50 indicates the strength of expansion or decline. Australian PMI® results are based on responses from a national sample of manufacturers that includes all states and all sub-sectors. The Australian PMI® uses the ANZSIC industry classifications for manufacturing sub-sectors and sub-sector weights derived from ABS industry output data. Seasonally adjusted and trend data are calculated according to ABS methodology. The Australian PMI® commenced in 1992. More information about the history and methodology of the Australian PMI® is available online.

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