26 June 2006
Confidence crawls back
Business confidence is starting to trend back upwards in a survey of over 800 business respondents undertaken
electronically by the Auckland Chamber of Commerce earlier this week.
Key messages from the survey that asked businesses to look ahead at conditions for the next six months shows that
business confidence has improved for the third quarter in a row despite renewed uncertainty that interest rates will
start coming down in the period ahead.
Commenting, Chamber Chief Executive Michael Barnett notes that the sharp fall in confidence that began in the Chamber’s
March 2005 survey has been replaced by an upward trend with more businesses predicting an improving environment for
doing business and proportionately more believing their own prospects will improve.
“This is good news and contrasts sharply with the negative talk that is persisting in certain quarters. The evidence
shows that an increasing number of businesses have decided to ‘put negativity to one side’ and are taking their own
decisions to move forward.”
At the end of the day, the strong self belief of many businesses is apparent. “The survey findings show that 40% of
businesses are picking the business environment to get worse in the next six months, compared with 49% who held this
view at the previous survey in March and the low point of 59% in the survey last December.”
Main survey findings were:
On Confidence
- 40% of firms believe conditions for business will get worse over the next six months, compared with 49% in the
previous March survey and 59% in December.
- Reinforcing the evidence of an improving trend, 12% now believe conditions will improve, compared with 8% in March and
just 7% in the December survey.
- 41% of firms believe conditions for their own individual business will improve over the next six months, compared to
40% in March and 35% in the December survey. Similarly, 18% believe their situation will get worse, down from 21% and
25% in the previous two surveys.
On Skills
- 37% of firms believe it will continue to be harder to employ the right people with the right skills, compared to 42%
last December and 54% a year ago.
On Interest Rates
- 44% of respondents now believe interest rates will rise, compared with 33% in March but 85% and 67% in the December
and September surveys respectively.
- 10% of respondents believe interest rates will decrease in the next 12 months, compared to the 24% of this view last
March and just 3% who held this view last December, and 5% in September.
Mr Barnett notes that the critical value of this survey compared to many others is that it is ‘here and now.’ The survey
measures the opinion of more than 800 businesses “last week – Monday to Wednesday - not last month or six weeks ago.”
The result showing a rising level of optimism suggests that earlier talk of the economy dipping towards a recession or a
hard landing was premature. Coupled with the news late last week showing annual GDP holding at above 2% suggests that
business can be confident about the future and keep the upward trend going in the period, said Mr Barnett.
ENDS