Pride or Prudence?
Pride or Prudence?
Historical survey data can be
found here
The latest New Zealand Manufacturers and Exporters
Association (NZMEA) Survey of Business Conditions completed
during June 2010, shows total sales in May 2010 increased
9.8% (export sales increased by 9% and domestic sales
increasing 10%) on May 2009. The NZMEA survey sample this
month covered NZ$347m in annualised sales, with an export
content of 41%. Net confidence rose to 50, up from the 46
result reported last month but locked in the ‘no
change’ and ‘modest rise’ categories. The current
performance index (a combination of profitability and cash
flow) is at 104.5 up from 102.5 in April, the change index
(capacity utilisation, staff levels, orders and
inventories) went up to 105 from 102 in the last survey,
and the forecast index (investment, sales, profitability
and staff) is at 105, down on April’s result of 108.25.
Anything less than 100 suggests a contraction.
Constraints reported were 70% markets and 10% each on
capacity, capital and staff. Staff numbers for May
increased 3%. It is the first time the survey has reported
an increase in employment since November 2008! “This is
probably the most positive survey we have seen since the
onset of the global financial crisis,” says NZMEA Chief
Executive John Walley, “that said, the recovery is
fragile, patchy and far from bedded in.” “The
broadening of the constraints is a further indication that,
right now at least, demand is stronger. Our forward looking
index has softened in line with reports of softening export
markets, but for the present sales have improved on last
year and job growth is reported for the first time.”
“When I look back at the net confidence numbers our survey
was in deep negative territory from early 2005, which
turned on trend earlier this year. That growth will have to
continue for a while yet before we start to see any real
investment kick in.” “We have long been of the view
that, frothy confidence numbers aside, jobs and sales are
better measures of where the world is at. On those measures
June was too early for the Reserve Bank to increase interest
rates; we remain of the view that September this year is the
earliest practical date to even consider a shift in
monetary policy.” “Pessimistic reports from other
commentators in New Zealand; continued concerns in our
financial sector; lower for longer messages from the
Federal Reserve; a no change out of the Reserve Bank of
Australia, and an Australian election in prospect;
significant budget cuts in the UK; on-going European
worries; and more appreciation of the RMB and other
economic worries out of China - all encourage a wait and see
position.” “Pride should not win out over prudence.
The RBNZ should signal lower for longer on interest rates
and indicate the favoured route will be to use
macroprudential efforts to press back against any inflation
concerns for the foreseeable
future.” ENDS