Australia Manufacturing PMI Slightly Revised Down

2026-02-01 23:06 By Chusnul Chotimah 1 min. read

The S&P Global Australia Manufacturing PMI was slightly revised lower to 52.3 in January 2026 from a preliminary estimate of 52.4, following a final reading of 51.6 in December.

The latest reading remained the fastest expansion in factory activity since August, as output and new orders rose at a faster pace, supported by foreign demand.

In response to rising new work inflows, firms continued to raise their staffing levels, with the pace of employment growth notably the strongest in almost three years.

Purchasing activity rose for a third straight month, while vendor performance deteriorated due to transportation delays, port congestion, and material shortages.

On prices, input cost inflation accelerated to a nine-month high due to higher raw material prices.

As a result, output prices rose as firms sought to pass on costs to customers.

Finally, business sentiment strengthened to its highest level in nearly four years, amid hopes of higher sales supported by economic growth.



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Australia Manufacturing PMI Slightly Revised Down
The S&P Global Australia Manufacturing PMI was slightly revised lower to 52.3 in January 2026 from a preliminary estimate of 52.4, following a final reading of 51.6 in December. The latest reading remained the fastest expansion in factory activity since August, as output and new orders rose at a faster pace, supported by foreign demand. In response to rising new work inflows, firms continued to raise their staffing levels, with the pace of employment growth notably the strongest in almost three years. Purchasing activity rose for a third straight month, while vendor performance deteriorated due to transportation delays, port congestion, and material shortages. On prices, input cost inflation accelerated to a nine-month high due to higher raw material prices. As a result, output prices rose as firms sought to pass on costs to customers. Finally, business sentiment strengthened to its highest level in nearly four years, amid hopes of higher sales supported by economic growth.
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