Friday 9th October 2009 |
Text too small? |
New Zealanders increased credit and debit card retail spending for a third straight month, adding to evidence that consumers are feeling more upbeat about the economy and easing open their wallets.
Electronic card transactions at retailers rose 0.7% in September, adding to the previous month’s 0.3% gain, according to Statistics New Zealand. Excluding auto-related spending, transactions rose 0.4%. The total number of card transactions rose 6.5% from a year earlier to 79 million.
Evidence is growing that the economy is recovering from its five-quarter contraction, which ended when growth returned at a 0.1% pace in the second quarter. The NZSE Consumer Index, which includes the listed retailers on the NZX, gained 0.4% today and has risen 4.8% in the past month.
Consumer confidence rose to a four-year high in the third quarter, according to the Westpac-McDermott Miller survey.
Today’s report showed spending on consumables, which include food and liquor, rose 0.4% while spending in the service industries rose 3.7%.
Businesswire.co.nz
No comments yet
AIA - Auckland Airport considers bond offers
September 22nd Morning Report
September 19th Morning Report
Smartpay Scheme Booklet and Notice of Meeting
September 18th Morning Report
Seeka Increases Forecast Full Year Earnings Guidance
TEM - Ability to invest in derivatives
Devon Funds Morning Note - 16 September 2025
September 17th Morning Report
MPG - Recapitalisation Closes Oversubscribed, Raises $23.9m