The National Bank survey showed firms' expectations for improvement in their own activity outlook dropped to a net 26.1 per cent from a net 35.4 per cent a month ago, while investment intentions fell to a net 8.7 per cent from 11.1 per cent and hiring intentions slipped to a net 9.9 per cent from a net 11.9 per cent in September.
Capacity utilisation crept up to a net 17.1 per cent from 16.9 per cent.
Bagrie said it was a "puzzle" that employment and investment intentions were more resilient than profitability.
Construction expectations dimmed in the month, with residential construction dipping to a net 29 per cent from a net 37.1 per cent of firms picking improvement, and commercial building falling to a net 18.7 per cent from a net 21.6 per cent.
Companies' pricing intentions were stable with a net 19.3 per cent expecting to raise prices in the coming year, compared to a net 19.6 in September, and one-year inflation expectations slipped to 3.12 per cent from 3.23 per cent.
A net 7 per cent of firms expect unemployment to increase in the next year compared to a net 5.2 per cent predicting a decline.
"There is enough in this month's business confidence survey on the downside for us to be taking notice," Bagrie said. "The economy still has a reasonable amount of momentum and we think the surprise has been the degree of resilience in business sentiment, given wider developments."