"A listless trend in consumer confidence is not a bad thing. It suggests a continued focus on balance sheet repair and a lift in the savings rate," Bagrie said. "These are precursors of a more sustained upturn - eventually."
"While the lift in house prices continues to receive attention, is has not been accompanied by a marked rise in credit - Indeed credit growth continues to track below income growth as people 'deleverage' and strike a half-way house between spending and saving," he said.
The survey comes after New Zealand's Reserve Bank left its official cash rate unchanged at 2.5 percent yesterday, while delaying its forecast increase in the 90-day bank bill rate, seen as a proxy for the benchmark interest rate, until 2014.
Today's survey showed inflation expectations rose 0.3 per cent to 3.4 per cent.
Overall confidence among males eased 4 points to 116. Female sentiment was unchanged at 108.
On a regional basis Wellington recorded the largest lift in confidence, up 13 points to a nationwide high of 118. Canterbury rose 4 points to 116, while the remaining regions all weakened.