Australia Leading Index Inches Down

2026-03-18 01:57 By Farida Husna 1 min. read

The Westpac–Melbourne Institute Leading Economic Index edged lower 0.1% month-on-month in February 2026, following a flat reading in the previous month.

Meanwhile, the six-month annualized growth rate, which indicates the likely pace of economic activity relative to trend three to nine months into the future, held at 0.08%, unchanged from January but down from more firmly positive reads seen late last year.

Momentum remains slightly above average in early 2026 but is expected to fade as the central bank’s latest rate hike takes hold and the broader impact of the Middle East conflict emerges.

Westpac projects Australia’s GDP growth to slow to 2% in 2026, down from 2.5% last year, underscoring a weakening trend below the nation’s long-term pace.

On the monetary front, economist Matthew Hassan noted another 25bp rate hike is likely at the May meeting.



News Stream
Australia Leading Index Inches Down
The Westpac–Melbourne Institute Leading Economic Index edged lower 0.1% month-on-month in February 2026, following a flat reading in the previous month. Meanwhile, the six-month annualized growth rate, which indicates the likely pace of economic activity relative to trend three to nine months into the future, held at 0.08%, unchanged from January but down from more firmly positive reads seen late last year. Momentum remains slightly above average in early 2026 but is expected to fade as the central bank’s latest rate hike takes hold and the broader impact of the Middle East conflict emerges. Westpac projects Australia’s GDP growth to slow to 2% in 2026, down from 2.5% last year, underscoring a weakening trend below the nation’s long-term pace. On the monetary front, economist Matthew Hassan noted another 25bp rate hike is likely at the May meeting.
2026-03-18
Australia Leading Index Muted
The Westpac–Melbourne Institute Leading Economic Index edged lower 0.1% month-on-month in January 2026, reversing a 0.1% rise in the previous month. More notably, the six-month annualized growth rate slowed sharply to 0.02% from 0.44% in December, indicating that the slightly above-trend momentum seen in the second half of 2025 has faded in early 2026. Despite the softer signal, Westpac still expects GDP growth to hold at 2.5% this year, close to its estimate of trend growth and broadly consistent with the index’s latest reading, which points to steady rather than accelerating activity. On monetary policy, while a near-term follow-up cash rate hike cannot be ruled out, the board is more likely to adopt a cautious stance, waiting for additional data before tightening further. The central bank’s next meeting is scheduled for March 16–17.
2026-02-18
Australia Leading Index Inches Higher
The Westpac–Melbourne Institute Leading Economic Index for Australia edged up 0.1% month-on-month in December 2025, following a flat reading in the previous month. Meanwhile, the six-month annualized growth rate rose to 0.42% from 0.20% in November, suggesting that the economic recovery seen through 2025 is carrying into early 2026. However, the improvement remains tentative, as the index is only modestly above its long-run trend and had stalled through the middle of last year. Head of Australian Macro-Forecasting Matthew Hassan noted that a clearly strong growth pulse, typically signaled by Leading Index growth above 1%, still appears some way off. Westpac expects the Australian economy to grow 2.4% this year. On the monetary front, the central bank is widely expected to keep the cash rate unchanged at its February meeting. Still, policymakers remain alert to inflation risks and have laid the groundwork for potential rate hikes should price pressures re-emerge.
2026-01-20