The Australian Industry Group/Housing Industry Association Australian Performance of Construction Index (Australian PCI®) declined by 2.5 points to 49.3 in September 2018, signaling the first easing in overall construction industry conditions in 20 months (readings below 50 indicate contraction in activity, with the distance from 50 indicating the strength of the decrease).
Ai Group Head of Policy, Peter Burn, said: “The performance of the Australian construction industry slipped into negative territory in September 2018 despite a strong contribution from engineering construction. The overall industry was weighed down by the residential sub-sectors with the continuing fall in apartment work reinforced by a drop in house building activity. The infrastructure boom concentrated in the south-east corner saw engineering construction extend its run of growth to eighteen months. Strong demand from this sub-sector is keeping pressure on input costs and fueling concerns over personnel shortages across a range of skilled occupations. At the same time, the downturn in the residential sub-sectors is associated with falls in industry-wide employment over the past few months with a decline in new orders pointing to the likelihood of a further easing of employment over the period ahead,” Dr Burn said.
HIA Economist, Diwa Hopkins, said: “The results in the Australian PCI® join a string of housing market updates released – home prices, home building approvals and new home sales – that are unanimous in showing a deterioration in conditions in the residential construction sector. Tighter credit conditions, declining home prices and a large volume of additional housing stock that is steadily flowing onto the market are key factors behind the deterioration. Earlier updates to the Australian PCI® were showing the effects of these factors were concentrated in the apartment market. Now we’re seeing the effects spill over to the detached house segment of the market. We’re expecting both house and apartment building activity to decline in 2019. Given the all-time highs from which this decline is occurring the overall level of building should still remain healthy by historical standards,” Ms Hopkins said.
Australian PCI® – Key Findings for September 2018:
- The activity sub-index in the Australian PCI® returned to modest expansion in September 2018 (up 2.5 points to 52.0), but the new orders sub-index contracted (down 9.7 points to 47.1) amid weaker demand conditions across all four industry sub-sectors. This was associated with a further decline in employment which recorded its sharpest fall in 21 months (down 2.2 points to 46.9).
- Across the four sub-sectors in the Australian PCI®, house building declined for a second consecutive month and at the steepest rate since August 2016 (down 7.8 points to 42.0), while apartment building recorded a seventh month of contraction, albeit at a slower rate (up 11.4 points to 44.2).
- Engineering construction was the strongest performing area of activity, with its rate of growth lifting strongly (up 10.7 points to 65.7 – an 18th straight month of growth) on the back of an expanding pipeline of publicly funded major projects. Commercial construction remained subdued, in slight negative territory for a third month (up 0.6 point to 49.8).
- The input prices sub-index remained elevated in September 2018 (up 0.7 points to 76.1), while growth in wages also continued (down 2.1 points to 60.6).
- The selling prices sub-index increased by 3.8 points to 50.6, suggesting pressures from input prices and wage rises are being passed on in part, but not broadly amid strong competition in securing work.
Background: The Ai Group/HIA Australian PCI® is a seasonally adjusted national composite index based on the diffusion indexes for activity, orders/new business, deliveries and employment with varying weights. An Australian PCI® reading above 50 points indicates that construction activity is generally expanding; below 50, that it is declining. The distance from 50 is indicative of the strength of the expansion or decline.
Source: Ai Group