New Zealand's economy contracted in 1Q, recession likely
Owing to widespread weakness, the New Zealand economy contracted 0.3%q/q (JPMorgan -0.4%, consensus -0.3%) in 1Q,
following a revised 0.8% expansion in 4Q (previously 1.0%).
It now appears that the New Zealand economy is in the midst of a recession. Our forecast calls for another contraction
in the economy in 2Q, with a 0.1%q/q decline in GDP expected. In particular, private consumption will continue to face
significant headwinds as high borrowing costs and rising prices eat into households' disposable incomes. Negative wealth
effects from the rapidly deteriorating housing market and the recent softening in labour market conditions will also
have dampened consumer confidence and spending. Exports should continue to benefit from the forecast decline in the Kiwi
dollar, although the harsh drought poses a key downside risk to the export outlook, as does a sharper than expected
slowdown in global demand. JPMorgan expects the Kiwi economy to grow a below-trend 0.8% in 2008.
Of the production-based GDP measures, the agriculture and construction industries were the main drags on growth in 1Q.
The agriculture industry fell 5.6%q/q, the largest decline in agriculture since 1Q 1998, as drought conditions in key
agricultural industries dragged down output. The main driver of the 1.9%q/q decline in the goods producing industries
was construction, down 5.2%, due to falls in both residential and non-residential construction.
The expenditure-measure of GDP fell 0.6%q/q in 1Q. Reflecting the sharp housing market downturn, residential investment
was the largest drag on growth in the March quarter. Residential investment took a hit from higher lending rates,
falling 5.5%q/q. The housing market has turned significantly this year, with house sales falling to a 16-year low in May
and the median house price falling 1.4% from a year earlier. With house prices forecast to decline further in 2008,
residential investment will continue to fall, especially given that net-permanent migration probably will be a net
outflow in coming months.
Ongoing financial market uncertainty also deterred business investment. Business investment fell 1.2% after surging 5.1%
in 4Q, as investment slowed in non-residential buildings and in intangibles. Business confidence remains weak, as do
firms' activity expectations as corporate profitability continues to suffer amid record high interest rates and tighter
credit conditions.
Private consumption also fell, slipping 0.4%q/q; this is the first quarter since June 2004 that private consumption has
contracted. Consumers are reining in spending amid record high interest rates, rising petrol prices, a deteriorating
housing market, and increased financial market volatility. Drought conditions in key dairy producing areas also have
dampened consumer sentiment and spending, and local banks recently have been passing on higher funding costs resulting
from credit market tightening, even though the official cash rate has remained steady since July.
Net exports also subtracted from growth. Export volumes slumped 1.8%q/q owing to the drought, with exports of dairy and
other food, beverages and tobacco products falling. Imports slowed, growing a mere 1.2%q/q, as domestic demand continued
to weaken. The 12.2%q/q slump in imports of motor vehicles, in particular, reflects the recent weakness in private
consumption.
Government spending was the only expenditure-based measure to rise in 1Q, up 1.1%q/q. The government is running a large
budget surplus, and government spending will probably remain elevated for the time being as the government embarks on
what it hopes will be a vote-winning spending spree in the run-up to the election to be held later this year.
Other data today showed that New Zealand's trade balance remained in deficit in May for the third straight month. A
deficit of NZ$196 million was recorded, bucking expectations for a surplus (JPMorgan NZ$50 million, consensus NZ$150
million).
In the 12 months to May, the deficit widened to NZ$4.81 billion from NZ$4.61 billion in April. From a year ago, exports
increased 11.2%, the highest ever for a May month, owing to increases in shipments of crude oil, meat and edible offal.
Imports were up a solid 17.3%oya, mainly owing to a spike in intermediate goods (+21.6%). In commodity imports, a large
increase in imports of petroleum and products (+NZ$235 million) was recorded, led by imports of crude oil.
Looking ahead, imports will likely moderate significantly in coming months, reflecting weakening domestic demand.
Elevated crude oil prices will keep upside pressure on headline imports, however, and the expected interest rate cuts
later this year should help support domestic demand. We expect that the RBNZ will start easing monetary policy in
September. The nation's export competitiveness should benefit from the anticipated deprecation of the Kiwi dollar, but
drought conditions will continue to weigh on agricultural production; this remains a key downside risk to the export
outlook, as does a sharper than expected slowdown in global demand.