Australia’s economic activity continued to slow in September, with the Judo Bank Manufacturing PMI dropping to 46.7, its lowest in 52 months, down from 48.5 in August. The Services PMI also declined, slipping to 50.6 from 52.5, while the Composite PMI fell back into contraction, down from 51.7 to 49.8, marking an 8-month low.
Matthew De Pasquale, Economist at Judo Bank, noted that the recent PMI weakness suggests households are saving more of the government stimulus than anticipated. He added that “the economy is gradually bringing supply and demand into balance,” supporting the case for maintaining the current cash rate rather than hiking it later this year.
Employment growth also showed signs of slowing, with the employment index barely in expansion at 50.8. Additionally, output price index, which tracks businesses raising consumer prices, hit its lowest level since January 2021. Although input prices dropped, they remain above pre-pandemic averages, signaling lingering inflationary pressures.