Australia

Beyond Mining: Australia's Service Sector Shows Fastest Growth in 4 Years

Australia services sector growth
Australia's service economy booms, driving employment gains

Australia's services sector is experiencing its strongest expansion since 2022, with the Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) surging to 56.3 in May 2026—well above the 50-point expansion threshold. The surge signals robust demand in banking, professional services, tourism, and education, offering a bright spot in Australia's otherwise mixed economic picture.

The PMI Surge: 56.3 and Rising

The services PMI of 56.3 represents a 4-month high and exceeds economist forecasts of 54.1. The index breakdown reveals strong momentum across key sub-components:

Sub-Index May 2026 3-Month Avg 12-Month Avg
Output/Activity 57.8 54.2 51.3
New Orders 56.4 53.1 50.8
Employment 55.2 52.8 49.7
Input Prices 48.3 49.6 52.1
Output Prices 52.1 51.7 50.4

Notably, input prices have fallen below 50 (contraction), suggesting cost pressures are easing—a positive sign for profit margins and potential wage growth without inflation acceleration.

Employment: Rising Across Services

Job Creation Momentum

Employment sub-index at 55.2 signals robust hiring intentions. Services firms are ramping headcounts across:

Wage Pressure Emerging

While input prices (including wages) show contraction, this reflects trailing data. Forward-looking hiring intentions suggest wage pressure will emerge by Q3 2026 as competition for skilled talent intensifies. RBA wage growth forecasts may need upward revision.

Sector Deep Dive: Finance Leads Expansion

Banking & Finance (PMI: 58.2)

Australia's banking sector is booming as mortgage stress easing and credit demand recovery take hold. Major banks (Commonwealth, Westpac, ANZ, NAB) reported Q1 FY2026 profit upgrades driven by:

Commonwealth Bank announced 1,200 new hires for compliance and AI roles. Westpac committed to expanding private banking divisions.

Professional Services (PMI: 56.8)

Consulting, accounting, and legal firms are experiencing strong demand from:

Tourism & Hospitality (PMI: 55.1)

International visitor arrivals to Australia reached 1.21 million in Q1 2026, up 12% YoY. China visitor numbers recovered to 85% of 2019 levels, boosting Sydney and Melbourne tourism. Hotel occupancy rates in major cities averaging 78%, the highest in 4 years.

Inflation: Stable and Below Target

Despite strong services demand, inflation remains benign at 3.4% (headline CPI in March 2026), below the RBA's 2-3% target band. This paradox reflects:

RBA Policy Implications

The services PMI surge, combined with stable inflation, presents the RBA with a "Goldilocks" scenario—growth without runaway inflation. Economists now expect the RBA to pause rate cuts by June 2026 after the 2.75% level is reached (down from current 3.1%). Further cuts (to 2.25%) are unlikely unless employment deteriorates sharply.

Risks and Caveats

AXT News Assessment

Australia's services sector expansion—now the fastest in 4 years—diversifies economic growth beyond commodity exports. Rising employment in financial services, tourism, and professional services suggests the economy is rebalancing. However, the gains are geographically concentrated in Sydney and Melbourne, with weaker activity in regional Australia. The RBA's path to rate cuts remains data-dependent, but the services PMI surge argues against aggressive cuts ahead.

Key Metrics (May 2026):