Political uncertainty saw business confidence sour in October as the interregnum before a government coalition was formed stoked negativity across all sectors.
Business confidence fell to a net 10 per cent of firms negative about the year ahead, from a net zero reading with as many pessimists as optimists in September, according to the ANZ Business Outlook. In seasonally adjusted terms, business confidence fell to a net 8 per cent negative from a net 16 per cent positive.
"Most survey responses were received in the first half of the month, before the final government make-up was decided," said ANZ Bank New Zealand chief economist Cameron Bagrie. "So this month's survey primarily covers the uncertainty around the outcome and not the outcome itself. The latter will be next month's story."
While other indicators held up better, a tempered mood became more apparent, Bagrie said. Regarding activity outlook, a net 22 per cent of firms anticipate better times ahead for their own business, down from 30 per cent in September. Adjusted for seasonality, activity expectations fell to net 24 per cent from net 37 per cent, below the average of net 28 per cent.
"With the economy now deep into the business cycle, it's harder to make strong gains, particularly with an engineered slowdown occurring in the housing market and resource constraints apparent," Bagrie said. "Transitions can be wobbly and create uncertainty, which is being exacerbated by changes in government policy and economic direction. What the 'social justice' version of capitalism or 'wellbeing' means for longer-term growth prospects remains an important talking point, and not only in New Zealand."