National Australia Bank monthly Business Survey for November
Business Conditions 5
- prior 7, revised higher from 6
- Drop for the second month in a row
- Conditions back down to their long-run average (for the first time since April of 2015)
Business Confidence 5
- prior 4
- All industry groups show a positive reading
Key points from NAB:
- November NAB Monthly Business Survey gave more hints of a moderation in the non-mining economic recovery
- Business conditions slid further in the month, dropping back to long-run average levels for the first time since April 2015 - largely driven by profitability and trading conditions (sales), as employment conditions were steady at already subdued levels
- However, in spite of the declining trend in business conditions, business confidence has remained relatively resilient, tracking broadly sideways in recent times and showing a modest improvement in November
- The retail industry continues to be a major drag on conditions, despite signs of improved retail sales recently, and now has the equal worst business conditions (along with mining)
- Inflation measures in the Survey remained subdued, with retail price growth remaining flat - despite notable increases in upstream retail costs
- In the context of numerous global uncertainties and weakening business conditions, the resilience of business confidence has been encouraging. With that said, it is not clear what effect (if any) the recent US election result has had on confidence
- The business confidence index rose 1 point, to +5 index points in November - although this is slightly below the series long-run average (+6). But while confidence has been relatively resilient, it is not at levels conducive of higher levels of investment activity - confirmed by disappointingly soft investment intentions in the recent ABS Capex Survey. Nonetheless, the capex measure in the NAB Business Survey remained positive this month, consistent with an increase in capacity utilisation rates, although forward orders remained soft
- We are becoming increasingly concerned about the underlying momentum in the economy as evidence mounts that the non-mining economy is losing steam. The downward trend in business conditions and signs of weakness in the Q3 National Accounts- beyond one-off influences such as poor weather - lend further support to this view. For now though, we expect to see a fair degree of 'bounce-back' next quarter, before the economy resumes its relatively subdued growth track, characterised by muted domestic demand
On the Reserve Bank of Australia:
- This view of the near-term outlook is significantly weaker than the RBA's
- Both the housing construction cycle and commodity exports are expected to peak in the relative near-term, compounding the challenge to growth further out
- Meanwhile, the rally in commodity prices is expected to be short-lived, and is unlikely to translate into higher investment or wages at this point in the commodity cycle
- Two more 25bp rate cuts are still expected from the RBA next year in response to ongoing low inflation and a more subdued growth outlook.
(bolding mine)
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AUD response is subdued, a pop above 0.75 and sitting around there as I update.
China data yet to come (due at 0200GMT)
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National Australia Bank survey more than 500 firms