New Zealand business confidence climbed to a 20-year high in the fourth quarter, lifting expectations for profits, hiring and investments, and raising the prospects for inflation to start to accelerate.
A net 52 per cent of businesses were optimistic in the December quarter, seasonally adjusted, the highest since June 1994 and up from 33 per cent three months earlier, which was itself the highest in more than three years, according to the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research's Quarterly Survey of Business Opinion.
Domestic trading activity, which is closely aligned with economic growth, climbed to the strongest since March 2005, with a seasonally adjusted net 15 per cent of firms experiencing a pickup in their own activity. Expectations for the coming quarter rose to 32 per cent from 24 per cent.
............作者: John.G 时间: 2014-1-14 09:49:27
QV has just released its latest data showing residential values continuing to rocket ahead and Auckland and Christchurch are leading the charge.
Values are up 3 per cent in the past three months, up 10 per cent annually and are now 12.5 per cent above the previous market peak of late 2007.
See the full QV release here.
Jonno Ingerson, QV.co.nz research director, said the increase defied scepticism.
"As the year went on, there was more and more talk in the media about property values once again overheating and that the increases were another bubble," he said.
A comparison of value changes in the main centres showed how much the national annual increase of 10 per cent was pushed up by Auckland and Christchurch, he said.
"From the North Shore to Manukau values increased between 15 per cent and 18 per cent annually, and values in Christchurch went up 12.7 per cent. In contrast, the rest of the main centres increased between 2.5 per cent and 4 per cent apart from Hamilton which was slightly higher at 5.8 per cent," Ingerson said.