Weekend Herald

NZ is facing major repair job: Bagrie

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Although business sentiment has lifted and there’s hope that economic fundamenta­ls could improve this year, reality continues to bite across all property sectors and affect consumer spending decisions, a leading economist says in Bayleys’ latest Total Property portfolio.

Cameron Bagrie, chief economist with consultanc­y firm Bagrie Economics, said that the new coalition government has an uphill battle ahead. He cautioned: “Hope is not a strategy to rely on – we need to see substance” when commenting on the country’s growth and productivi­ty outlook.

“New Zealand – not just the government – is facing a major repair job. The good news is that tough times can often bring bold and better decisions and an example is local authoritie­s that have finally woken up to reality and taken steps to remedy structural weaknesses.”

Bagrie said New Zealand’s inflation rate is slowing down, but stressed that although the December quarterly inflation rate of 4.7 per cent was the lowest seen since June 2021, it is still more than twice that of the midpoint of the Reserve Bank’s annual target range between 1-3 per cent.

“The slow pace at which core inflation is waning has the central bank nervous.

“The longer it is away from the inflation target, the more potential for pricing behaviour to settle higher. If that happened, the central bank would need to restore its inflation credibilit­y and that will mean higher interest rates and further hits to the economy.”

He added that getting inflation back to that 2 per cent midpoint is not being helped by geopolitic­al influences that are disrupting supply chains, and adding to costs, or New Zealand’s infrastruc­tural deficits which are now holding back productivi­ty.

Bagrie said commercial property sales volumes “tanked” in 2023 because sellers and buyers hit an impasse, but expects to see vendors actively revisit price expectatio­ns as this year unfolds – particular­ly as banks are tightening their lending books.

“Although still relatively low, the percentage of non-performing commercial loans has risen rapidly to one percent of all commercial loans, and banks are likely to ‘encourage’ some divestment. That will support more deals, but those deals will need to be priced right for the bank to finance them. Banks cannot shrink their balance sheets to success so as the market becomes balanced and buyers and vendors align, the credit wheels will turn.”

Bayleys national director commercial and industrial, Ryan Johnson said the firm’s transactio­n volumes rose considerab­ly in the last quarter across asset classes and price bands. “This shows that the previously gaping bid-ask spread has narrowed with vendors bowing more to buyers.

“In 2023 we saw a number of managed work-outs as lenders took a red pen to debt levels and took steps to secure collateral from exposed clients. While it’s too early to know exactly how 2024 will play out on this front, the banks are likely to be leaning on over-leveraged landlords to take action.”

Johnson says typically, Auckland has led the rest of the country in terms of an uplift in both transactio­n volumes and listing activity, with other main centres following in its wake.

“Hamilton, Tauranga, Wellington and Christchur­ch are expected to see a further pick-up in activity and opportunit­y. In recent weeks, our Hamilton office had strong bidding on 13 of 14 properties, with 10 sold under the hammer and negotiatio­ns on three others.

“Wellington is an interestin­g one as the office market could be in for some significan­t rationalis­ation due to signalled public sector staffing and budgetary cuts which could lead to more stock for sale, along with more sub-lease space and office vacancy.”

Bayleys head of insights, data and consulting, Chris Farhi said results of a 2023 fourth-quarter sentiment survey across the agency’s salesforce showed its commercial and industrial salespeopl­e expect a mixed bag of activity in 2024.

“Given that changes in the market take time to show up in the actual sales data, tapping into the views of brokers and their take on the occupier and landlord market gives us an early sense of what is changing, and helps our salesforce to confidentl­y inform buyers and sellers about prevailing market conditions.

“While it’s encouragin­g to see generally improving sentiment and activity in the residentia­l sector, the commercial and industrial sector continues to have challenges with a level of disconnect between sellers and buyers.”

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Cameron Bagrie
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Ryan Johnson
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Chris Fahri

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