Australia
has reported weaker-than-expected economic growth between July and September,
due largely to a drop off in mining investment.
Its
economy grew 0.3% in the third quarter, compared to the previous quarter, and
was up 2.7% year-on-year, according to official numbers.
Economists
had expected quarterly growth of 0.7% for the period and year-on-year growth of
3.1%.
The
Australian dollar fell to
a new four-year low on the news.
Analysts
said the gross domestic product (GDP) numbers meant the nation's economy was
growing below trend, and that the decline in mining investment would be a major
hurdle for the economy for up to the next two years.
"Australian
GDP growth in the third quarter significantly undershot expectations, with
shares and the Australian dollar weakening immediately," Sydney-based CMC
Markets analyst Michael McCarthy told the BBC.
But
he said markets may see through the weaker reading.
"Recent
leading indicators such as capital expenditure and building approvals have
shown strength," Mr McCarthy said.
Some
analysts say the disappointing growth results could put pressure on Australia's
central bank to lower rates early next year
"Additionally,
the consumer component of the national data surprised on the upside, with
employment and spending picking up and the household savings ratio falling to
9.3% from persistent reports above 10%," he added.
Export
and current account figures, released on Tuesday, had painted a brighter
picture, raising expectations of a solid GDP reading for the quarter.
"The
interesting pick out of [today's] figure is net disposable income is down 0.3%,
and fixed investment is also falling," Evan Lucas, a market strategist at
IG Markets in Melbourne told the BBC.
"And
with fourth quarter GDP looking even weaker on the commodities slowdown, growth
in Australia looks in for a tough time," he added.
Some
analysts say the growth results could put pressure on Australia's central bank
to lower rates early next year.
The
Reserve Bank of Australia maintained its record low official interest rate at
its monthly meeting on Tuesday.
The
bank's interest rate has been at 2.5% since August last year.
BBC
Business
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