Sharechat Logo

Business confidence holds steady at three-year high in second quarter, NZIER says

Tuesday 9th July 2013

Text too small?

Business confidence held at a three-year high in the second quarter as domestic trading activity eased, according to the latest Quarterly Survey of Business Opinion from the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research.

A net 31 percent of businesses remained optimistic in June, seasonally adjusted, unchanged from the March quarter, the institute said. Last quarter was the highest since March 2010 when a net 33 percent were optimistic.

Domestic trading activity, which is closely aligned with economic growth, eased in the latest quarter with a net 4 percent of firms experiencing a pickup in their own activity, down from a net 10 percent three months earlier, the institute said. That reading is consistent with more than 2 percent annual economic growth in the June quarter, the institute said.

"The economy is settling into a growth pattern," said institute chief executive Jean-Pierre de Raad. "Businesses continue to be optimistic, similar to last quarter. They are acting on that optimism with investment and hiring which had been the missing ingredient in the recovery that we are seeing right across the regions."

A net 9 percent of firms expect to hire more workers in the next quarter, up from a net 5 percent last quarter. A net 4 percent of firms expect to invest more in buildings, up from 3 percent last quarter, while a net 10 percent plan to invest more in plant and machinery, up from 8 percent the previous quarter.

The economic recovery is uneven across regions, with a surge in Canterbury, gradual growth in Auckland and contraction in Wellington, the institute said. In the North Island, the drought negatively affected the Waikato and Bay of Plenty regions.

 

Costs and prices ticked up in the June quarter but remain at historically modest levels, the institute said. Much of the costs and price pressures are concentrated in Canterbury and are low elsewhere, the institute said.

For 27 percent of Canterbury firms, capacity is a constraint to growth, the institute said. That compares with 10 percent of firms in the rest of New Zealand, up from 6 percent last quarter, the institute said.

Activity is growing strongly for manufacturing and building, largely driven by Canterbury, the institute said. Service sales are growing gradually while financial services sales slowed in line with lower mortgage approvals in recent months. Growth in retail sales also slowed.

BusinessDesk.co.nz



  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

Fonterra appoints permanent COO
Manawa Energy FY24 Annual Results & Webcast Details
Seeka Provides the Results of Meeting - ASM
April 19th Morning Report
PGW Guidance Update
CNU - Commerce Commission releases draft expenditure decision
Spark announces departure of Product Director
TGG - T&G appoints new Director
April 18th Morning Report
SKC - APPOINTMENT OF CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER