ConsensusActualPrevious
Quarter over Quarter1.0%-2.2%1.0%
Year over Year0.3%5.5%

Highlights

Australia's survey of private capital expenditures shows spending in this category fell 2.2 percent on the quarter (volumes, seasonally adjusted) in the three months to June, weakening from an increase of 1.0 percent in the three months to March. Private capex rose just 0.3 percent on the year in the three months to June after advancing 5.5 percent previously.

Weaker headline capex growth reflects weaker growth in both major categories. Spending on equipment plant and machinery fell 0.5 percent on the quarter after a previous increase of 3.3 percent while spending on buildings and structures fell 3.8 percent after a previous decline of 0.9 percent. Conditions were again mixed on a sectoral basis, with capex increasing by 1.5 percent on the quarter in the mining sector and falling by 3.6 percent in the non-mining sector.

Today's release also includes the survey's revised forecast for private capex in the 2023-24 fiscal year (in value terms ending July 30). Officials now expect it to be A$182.0 billion, up 0.5 percent from the previous estimate made three months earlier of A$180.6 billion and also up from A$165.1 billion, the actual amount of spending in the 2022-23 fiscal year. Officials have also revised their estimate for capex in the 2024-25 fiscal year to $170.7 billion, up 10.3 percent from their previous estimate of A$155.4 billion.

The capex survey covers around 60 percent of total business investment in Australia. More comprehensive information on investment will be published in the GDP report for this quarter, scheduled for release next week.

Market Consensus Before Announcement

Capital Expenditures for the second quarter are expected to rise 1.0 percent on the quarter to match the first quarter's better-than-expected increase.

Definition

Private New Capital Expenditure & Expected Expenditure data are estimates of actual and expected new capital expenditure by private businesses for selected industries in Australia. New capital expenditure refers to the acquisition of new tangible assets either on own account or under a finance lease and includes major improvements, alterations and additions. In general, this is expenditures charged to fixed tangible assets accounts excluding expenditure on second hand assets unless these are imported for the first time.

Note: The Australian Fiscal Year begins on July 1 and ends on June 30.

Description

Capital expenditures are a key to sustained growth and this survey provides information about capital spending and the types of assets that are drawing the most attention from industry. The survey, which is conducted quarterly by mail, is based on a random sample of approximately 8,000 units. The sample is stratified by industry, state/territory and derived employment size. The figures obtained from the selected units are supplemented by data from units which have large capital expenditure and are outside the sample framework or not adequately covered by it. Among the assets covered are buildings and structures including both business and residential, equipment for these structures as well as infrastructure spending. Equipment includes fixed equipment such as machinery, autos, office equipment, etc.
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