Monday 19th December 2016 |
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New Zealand consumer confidence posted its biggest lift in four years in the December quarter as rural communities were more upbeat after gains in dairy prices although households remain cautious.
The Westpac McDermott Miller consumer confidence index rose 5.2 points to 113.1 in the December quarter, above the long-run average of 111.4. A reading above 100 indicates optimists outnumber pessimists. The present conditions index rose 2.2 points to 111.4, while the expected conditions index gained 7.2 points to 114.3.
A net 18 percent of the 1,554 people surveyed from Dec. 1 – 10 expect the economic outlook to improve over the coming year, compared to a net 1.8 percent seeing an improvement in the September quarter, while a net 17.2 percent see better times over a five-year horizon, up from 15 percent three months earlier. The survey has a margin of error of 2.5 percent.
“Gains in confidence have been widespread,” said Westpac Banking Corp acting Chief Economist Michael Gordon. “Notably there’s been a marked lift in confidence among rural households. This follows strong increases in global dairy prices in recent months.”
The dairy industry forms the backbone of the New Zealand economy, accounting for around a quarter of exports. New Zealand farmers had been hard hit by a plunge in global dairy prices, hurt by China's economic slowdown and global oversupply. Since July the price of whole milk powder - New Zealand's key commodity export - has soared almost 75 percent. Last month, Fonterra Cooperative Group hiked its forecast payout to its 10,500 farmer shareholders to $6 per kilo of milk solids for the current season, versus $3.90 in the prior season.
Gordon noted there has also been an increase in confidence among households on lower incomes, as the labour market strengthens on the back of solid economic activity.
Data this week is expected to show New Zealand’s economy to have extended a steady growth rate for the fifth straight quarter. Economists are tipping third quarter growth of 0.9 percent, supported by low interest rates, a large pipeline of construction work, rapid population growth and strong tourism.
However, while households are feeling more upbeat, they remain cautious. “They are still keeping an eye on their purse strings,” said Gordon.
The number of households who think it’s a good time to buy a major item was only 0.3 points higher than in the third quarter and remained below average levels.
“New Zealand consumers may feel more optimistic now, but this does not necessarily mean they be spending large this Christmas,” said Richard Miller, Managing Director of McDermott Miller.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
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