Manufacturing expansion extends into June

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The Australian Industry Group Australian Performance of Manufacturing Index (Australian PMI®) inched 0.2 points higher to 55.0 in June – a ninth consecutive month of expansion for the manufacturing sector.

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 manufacturing sector closed the financial year by extending its unbroken expansionary run to nine months. Sales, exports and production all lifted and growth was widespread across the sector. Higher activity in the metal products; machinery & equipment; petroleum, coal, chemical & rubber products; and non-metallic mineral products sub-sectors augmented the further growth of the large food & beverages sub-sector. While a lift in new orders indicates that momentum may continue in the near-term, concerns about the impacts of further rises in energy prices are accumulating like storm clouds over the sector and particularly for more energy-intensive industries. With policy uncertainties inhibiting investment in energy and in energy-using sectors, it is imperative that sensible and bipartisan resolution be reached as soon as possible," Willox said.  

Australian PMI®: Key Findings for June:

  • Five of the seven activity sub-indexes in the Australian PMI® expanded in June (see table below), with new orders strengthening (up 1.4 points to 59.5) as sales surged (up 6.5 points to 60.9).
  • As in the previous two months, seven of the eight manufacturing sub-sectors expanded strongly in June (trend data*), with all but the textiles, clothing, furniture & other manufacturing sub-sector (down a further 4.7 points to an historic low of 29.2) exceeding 54 points. The large machinery & equipment sub-sector increased by 0.2 points to 60.1 – its highest monthly result since the current sub-index commenced in 2009 (trend).
  • The input prices sub-index increased by 1.1 points to 64.9 in June, while wages dropped a point but remained elevated at 60.4 points.
  • The selling prices sub-index plummeted 9.1 points to 47.1, ending a rare five months of price increases and adding further pressure to manufacturers' margins.
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