
PMI Indicates Expansion Continues but Momentum Slows
The latest survey shows that Australia's private sector remains in expansion territory, but the pace has noticeably slowed. The manufacturing sector appears relatively stable, benefiting from improved external demand and growth in new orders, with production activities continuing upward; in contrast, the growth of the services sector has significantly decelerated, becoming a key factor dragging down overall economic vitality. Although the composite index has remained above the expansion threshold for several months, it has hit a periodic low, reflecting a shift in the economic operation from "broad-spectrum expansion" to "structural differentiation."
This change implies that the growth pivot is shifting from domestic service demand to more commodity-focused areas, with economic resilience relying more on outward-turning orders and manufacturing recovery rather than a comprehensive rebound.
New Orders and Employment Provide Support
From a demand perspective, new business orders continue to increase, providing a foundation for production expansion, although the growth rate has slowed compared to previous periods. In terms of employment, businesses continue to add hands to cope with existing workloads, with labor demand maintaining moderate growth. This suggests that businesses remain confident in short-term operations, with no clear signs of significant contraction yet.
It is worth noting that companies’ expectations for the future have not weakened in step, with confidence indicators remaining high since mid-year, indicating that management remains cautiously optimistic about the mid-term outlook. However, the internal differences within industries are deepening: backlogs are accumulating in manufacturing, while services continue to digest existing orders, leading to an overall decline in backlog levels.
Rising Costs Push Up Price Pressure
Costs and prices are currently among the market's most watched variables. Recently, input costs have risen in both major industries, with commodity-related costs seeing a particularly sharp increase. Businesses are passing on some of these costs to maintain profits, causing sales price inflation to rise back to a periodic high, approaching the long-term average.
This type of "cost-push" inflation is particularly tricky in the context of slowing growth momentum, as it weakens consumer purchasing power and complicates policy responses. For financial markets, this reinforces the view that "inflation stickiness remains."
Consumer Confidence Returns to Pessimistic Range
Unlike the relatively stable business front, the mood in the household sector has markedly weakened. The latest survey shows that consumer confidence has once again fallen into the pessimistic range after a brief rebound, with concerns over inflation and interest rate outlooks regaining dominance. Expectations for personal finances, short-term economic conditions, and long-term growth have all been downgraded to varying degrees, and the willingness to purchase durable goods has cooled simultaneously.
The survey results indicate that residents have formed expectations regarding monetary policy signals, and a single decision is unlikely to reverse sentiment; the "perceived pressure" of inflation remains the core factor affecting confidence.
Weakening Australian Dollar Reflects Repricing Process
Under the multiple influences of growth divergence, rising inflation, and weakening confidence, the forex market has repriced the Australian dollar. Recently, the Australian dollar has been falling against the US dollar, with technical levels breached, reflecting cautious assessments of policy prospects by investors. Phased fluctuations in the US dollar combined with internal variables in Australia are putting short-term pressure on the exchange rate.
The core market debate is whether rising inflation will force policies to remain tighter, or slowing growth will eventually prompt a shift. Current price trends indicate that traders are leaning towards the former risk weighting.
Policy Outlook Enters Critical Observation Period
Looking ahead, communication and data guidance from the Reserve Bank of Australia will be in focus. On one hand, cost and price pressures limit rapid easing space; on the other hand, a weakening services sector and declining confidence cast shadows on growth prospects. If inflation does not significantly recede subsequently, policies may need to more delicately balance "stabilizing growth" and "controlling inflation."
Until then, the Australian dollar may continue to fluctuate around data and expectations, with structural changes in the economy becoming important for determining policy trajectories and asset pricing.

