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Australia Firms See Worst Slump in Conditions Since Financial Crisis

Australia Firms See Worst Slump in Conditions Since Financial Crisis

(Bloomberg) -- Australian firms suffered the worst slump in conditions since the 2008 global financial crisis as evidence mounts that the economy slowed in the latter part of last year.

The business conditions index -- measuring hiring, sales and profits -- dropped to 2 in December from 11 a month earlier, a National Australia Bank Ltd. report showed Tuesday. A gauge of employment fell to 4 from 9 in November, while profitability plunged to zero from 8. A separate confidence index was unchanged at 3.

NAB Chief Economist Alan Oster said the drop had been “broad-based” across all states and industries outside of mining. “These declines taken at face value suggest a significant slowing in business activity,” he said. “There could be some implications for the labor market and business capital expenditure.”

The Australian dollar fell after the report, buying 71.47 U.S. cents at 12:10 p.m. in Sydney compared with 71.57 before its release.

Australia Firms See Worst Slump in Conditions Since Financial Crisis

The result dovetails with slower economic growth in the third quarter as falling property prices threaten to throw a wet blanket over the Australian economy. Money markets are increasingly nervous and traders are pricing in about a 70 percent chance of an interest-rate cut by the end of the year -- despite the central bank saying it expects the next move to be an increase.

“Interpreting data around the holiday period can be difficult,” Oster said. “With confidence remaining below average and forward orders having also declined, our expectation is that, at the very least, a significant portion of the decline in business conditions will persist.”

While Australia’s wage growth has been anemic in the past five years, hiring has accelerated since 2017 and consumption held up as households opted to save less. The concern now is consumers will hunker down in response to declining property prices, known as the wealth effect, which could hit already struggling retailers hard.

What Our Economists Say...

“The Reserve Bank will likely be concerned that vulnerability has become more broad-based. A weak print on CPI, private sector credit and house prices later this week could cement a rate cut signal -- if not action -- as soon as next week’s meeting. Once fear takes over, it’s difficult to rein in.”

-- Tamara Mast Henderson, Bloomberg Economics

Australia’s central bank has kept rates at a record-low 1.5 percent since 2016 as it tries to spur hiring and tighten the labor market to encourage faster wage growth. It’s had some success, with unemployment falling to 5 percent.

Policy makers will hold their first meeting for the year on Tuesday Feb. 5.

To contact the reporter on this story: Michael Heath in Sydney at mheath1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nasreen Seria at nseria@bloomberg.net, Chris Bourke, Garfield Reynolds

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