
ANZ鈥榮 Business Outlook survey shows confidence has taken a hit in April as US trade policy rattled markets.
鈥淭he month of April was punctuated by global market turmoil precipitated by US tariff announcements,鈥 said ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner.
鈥淲e can divide our sample into those received early in the month, mostly between 1 and 4 April, and those received late in the month.鈥
鈥淭he latter sample is smaller and therefore subject to more statistical noise and volatility and we would take it as a directional signal rather than taking the numbers as gospel.鈥
However, the data did support the idea that the turmoil has had a marked negative impact on most forward-looking indicators, she said.
The impact was most acute on headline business confidence and businesses鈥 plans to invest.
Business confidence fell nine points to +49 in April.
Meanwhile, expected own activity fell just one point to 48.
More positively, past own activity jumped 10 points to 11, while past employment jumped eight points to two, Zollner said.
鈥淎ctivity indicators overall continue to tell a tale of an economy that鈥檚 recovering,鈥 she said.
Pricing and cost indicators indicated a margin squeeze from ongoing cost pressures.
But one-year-ahead inflation expectations were little changed at 2.65%.
鈥淟ooking at the detail, firms on average expect costs to rise 2.7% over the next three months, while they expect to raise prices by just 1.8% over the same period.
鈥淭hat indicates margin squeeze 鈥 a long-running theme 鈥 amidst persistent cost pressures,鈥 she said.
Zollner noted that ANZ had recently revised down its forecast for growth and the Official Cash Rate, 鈥減artly because some of the high-frequency data has started to stutter a little鈥.
鈥淏ut also because we suspected that the uncertainty around the global outlook and broader policy moves by the US administration would lead some firms to put their investment and employment plans back on the shelf.
鈥淭his month鈥檚 survey results suggest that could well be the case. But we鈥檒l have to wait and see whether the impact is short-lived or lasting.
鈥淭hat in itself will depend not least on whether trade spats de-escalate or worsen from here鈥.
ANZ economists now expect the Reserve Bank to cut the Official Cash Rate to 2.5% 鈥 50 basis points lower than previously assumed.
Liam Dann is business editor-at-large for the New Zealand Herald. He is a senior writer and columnist and also presents and produces videos and podcasts. He joined the Herald in 2003.
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