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Australia's construction sector slips into contraction in August, weak house building weighs

The Australia Industry Group (AiG) performance construction index (PCI) plunged to 46.6 in August, down from 51.6 the previous month. Data showed on Wednesday that Australia’s construction industry fell back into contraction in August with weak house building, which slumped 13.8 points to 41.1 points acting as the major drag.

Break down of the monthly performance by subsector showed that while housing construction activity plunged, levels for apartment, commercial and engineering construction all expanded at a modest clip. Details were in line with recent data on building approvals and public infrastructure spending.

The new orders subindex which is a lead indicator on futures activity levels in the sector, fell by 6.2 points to 45.5. New orders in house building decreased by 14.9 points to 39.3 points, points to a further softening in house building activity in coming months and follows a 0.5 percent m/m fall (-2.9 percent p.a.) in private sector house approvals in July.

Apartment orders came in at 50.3, down 2.7 points on July. The measures on new orders for engineering and commercial construction also declined, falling to 47.0 points and 48.1 points respectively.

Housing Industry Association chief economist Harley Dale said the residential construction cycle was peaking and the index suggests there is not enough non-residential building work to sustain the sector.

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