NAB: Business Conditions Unwind In April

By Glenn Dyer | More Articles by Glenn Dyer

The National Australia Bank has seen March’s surprise jump in business conditions in its monthly survey unwind in April – with conditions, confidence and forward orders now all below average as they were in February.

The NAB said business conditions fell 4pts to +3 index points in April with declines across each of the components.

The employment index saw a particularly sharp decrease, falling to -1, while trading and profitability each declined by 4pts.

All three components are now below average.

Confidence edged up 1pt in the month to 0 index points but remains well below average – suggesting little improvement in business conditions in coming months.

The NAB said the sharp decline in the employment index to a below average read was the first since late 2016 and “(f)uture readings of this index should be closely watched as, for the most part, leading indicators of the labour market have remained positive to date but could be expected to decline based on the prior slowing in economic activity.”

The Reserve Bank has made the continuing health of the jobs market the key determinant in the timing of cuts to its cash rate. The April Labour Force data out tomorrow will be part of that test.

The central bank watches the NAB survey and its various components closely because it has the longest history of any private sector business survey. The sharp downturn in the NAB’s employment index will raise a red flag with the RBA

The NAB said that elsewhere in the April survey weak reads on business confidence and forward orders “suggest ongoing weakness in private sector momentum with growth likely to remain weak in coming quarters.”

“Capacity utilisation remains around average but no longer suggests a strong outlook for employment and capex.

“Overall, price pressures remain weak across the costs variables (including wage bill growth), suggesting that in addition to a slowing in the pace of activity in the business sector, there still remains spare capacity in the labour market, which is a factor that the RBA remains concerned about.

NAB Group Chief Economist said in yesterday’s survey commentary that “the bounce in conditions in March was short-lived, as we expected given the weakness in forward-looking indicators.”

“While trading and profitability have previously dipped below average, this is the first time the employment index has shown signs of weakness. While employment has previously held up better – similar to official data – the impact of slowing activity and a weak outlook may now be flowing through to the labour market”.

“We will be watching future readings of the employment index to assess if this is a sustained signal – the index at these levels, based on historical relationships, suggests employment growth of 14k per month.

“This is a slowing from the rates seen through the second half of 2018 and early 2019. This is in accordance with our view that the slowing in growth will likely mean that no further progress is made on reducing the unemployment rate” said Mr Oster.

The NAB said the survey showed business conditions declined across all mainland states except South Australia (from low levels) in the month. In trend terms, conditions remain most favourable in Tasmania, followed by NSW and Victoria. The other states are below the national average, with SA recording the weakest business conditions.

“The South-eastern states generally continue to show the most favourable business conditions on the mainland and Tasmania continues to standout overall. South Australia looks weak, and it is now clear Western Australia has again deteriorated after showing some signs of recovery in late 2017/early 2018. A year later, most of the improvement seems to have been reversed” Mr Oster said.

“Across industries we continue to see the best conditions in mining and the services sector – recreation & personal, and finance, business & property services. While retail saw some improvement in trend terms, the goods distribution industries, including wholesale and retail remain weakest” Mr. Oster added.

About Glenn Dyer

Glenn Dyer has been a finance journalist and TV producer for more than 40 years. He has worked at Maxwell Newton Publications, Queensland Newspapers, AAP, The Australian Financial Review, The Nine Network and Crikey.

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