NAB Survey deteriorates in April

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In the first survey to give corroboration to the startling fall in last month’s PSI, the April NAB survey has come in weak:

Business confidence rose a touch but conditions fell 3 points to 0, trading tanked 8 points to 0 and profitability also tanked 7 points to -4. Forward orders and stocks were unchanged at weak levels. Exports fell 4 points to -4. Labour costs rebounded. Capacity utilisation fell too. Employment was up 2 points looks like the outlier. In a word, ugly.

Even the bulls at NAB struggled to make this report look good:

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  • In April, businesses remained quietly confident that activity will pick up in the near term. Part of the improvement in sentiment may reflect increased speculation of further rate cuts after official data confirmed that underlying inflation remained subdued in the March quarter (the survey was taken before the RBA lowered the cash rate by 50 basis points at its meeting in May). However, weakness in near-term growth and the fiscal tightening may be weighing on hiring and investment intentions.
  • Business conditions fell back in April, unwinding the gradual improvement in activity that was occurring in the early months of this year. The fall back in conditions in April reflected a weakening in profitability and trading conditions, which were offset by a slight improvement in employment conditions. That may well mean that employment growth will weaken further in the face of poorer activity outcomes. Forward indicators of demand were fairly lacklustre, with capacity utilisation falling to its lowest level since mid 2009 – this in part reflected a heavy deterioration in utilised capacity in the manufacturing sector. Overall, the survey implies underlying demand growth in the June quarter may have slowed to around 3% and GDP growth of around 2¾%.
  • Conditions deteriorated across all industries in April, with the exception of mining and retail – with the latter’s sales boosted by further aggressive discounting. Transport & utilities reported a heavy deterioration in conditions, after improving significantly in recent months, while manufacturing conditions also weakened considerably.
  • Mining continued to outperform all other industries, while manufacturing conditions remained worryingly low.
  • Conditions in Victoria deteriorated significantly, with this state now clearly under performing all other mainland states.
  • Demand for credit also weakened further – with a new high (69%) of respondents reporting that they did not want credit in April.
  • Labour costs growth ticked up in April, which was consistent with the slight improvement in employment conditions, while purchase costs growth picked up modestly. However, product prices growth was unchanged and very subdued, suggesting that overall margins had been squeezed in the month. The tightness in margins is likely to be very pronounced in the retail sector at present, with retail prices falling significantly in April.

So, we did see a significant freeze in business conditions in April. It does not look as bad in this report as it did the PSI but it is nonetheless very obvious, especially in poor old Victoria, where the trouble has just begun.
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About the author
David Llewellyn-Smith is Chief Strategist at the MB Fund and MB Super. David is the founding publisher and editor of MacroBusiness and was the founding publisher and global economy editor of The Diplomat, the Asia Pacific’s leading geo-politics and economics portal. He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.