The Australian Industry Group Australian Performance of Manufacturing Index (Australian PMI®) increased by a further 1.8 points to 61.7 in April, indicating a seventh consecutive month of recovery from the severe disruptions of COVID-19 in Q2 of 2020 and the index's highest monthly result since March 2018. It is the third highest rate of growth recorded since the Australian PMI® moved to a monthly format in May 2001 (readings above 50 points indicate expansion in activity, with higher results indicating a faster rate of expansion).
All six manufacturing sectors in the Australian PMI® expanded in April 2021, as did all seven activity indicators. The capacity utilisation index hit a record high, suggesting employment and/or investment may need to step up in order to facilitate further growth from here.
Ai Group Chief Executive Innes Willox said: "Australia's manufacturing industry showed no signs of slowing in the month following the end of the JobKeeper wage subsidy. Instead the industry continued to grow and in fact lifted the pace of expansion in April. All six manufacturing sectors expanded at a healthy rate led by the food & beverage sector with very strong support from the machinery & equipment and building products sectors. There was a large lift in manufacturing production, sales and exports and employment continued to grow solidly – although not at the very rapid pace seen in March. To date the sector as a whole has not been adversely affected by the stronger Australian dollar although a number of businesses are keeping a close eye on where the currency goes from here. That said, the further expansion of new orders in April is an encouraging pointer to continuing positive conditions over the next couple of months," Mr Willox said.
Australian PMI®: Key Findings for April 2021
Seasonally adjusted |
Index this month |
Change from last month |
Long-run average |
Trend |
Index this month |
Change from last month |
Long-run average |
Australian PMI® |
61.7 |
1.8 |
50.7 |
Food & beverages |
61.9 |
1.7 |
53.8 |
Production |
63.6 |
6.4 |
51.4 |
Machinery & Equipment |
63.7 |
-0.1 |
50.1 |
Employment |
58.0 |
-8.0 |
49.0 |
Metals products |
52.5 |
0.6 |
47.3 |
New Orders |
63.4 |
-0.1 |
51.3 |
Petroleum, coal, chemicals & rubber products |
59.6 |
-1.0 |
51.5 |
Supplier Deliveries |
59.1 |
5.0 |
51.0 |
Building, wood, furniture & other |
62.6 |
3.3 |
49.9 |
Finished Stocks |
63.0 |
10.3 |
49.6 |
Textiles, clothing, footwear, paper & printing |
63.9 |
0.2 |
46.8 |
Exports |
58.8 |
7.5 |
50.1 |
||||
Sales |
65.1 |
6.3 |
49.3 |
||||
Input prices |
74.1 |
2.8 |
67.5 |
||||
Selling prices |
52.9 |
-6.8 |
48.3 |
||||
Average wages |
61.8 |
-2.0 |
58.7 |
||||
Capacity utilisation (%) |
85.1 |
2.5 |
74.0 |
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.
Media Enquiries: Tony Melville: 0419 190 347