Business Day

Business confidence falls to 21-year low

• Economists say Bank has more room to cut repo rate next week

- Lynley Donnelly Economics Writer donnellyl@businessli­ve.co.za

Business confidence fell to a 21-year low at the start of 2020, as weak demand, power cuts, deteriorat­ing government finances and the spread of the coronaviru­s hurt sentiment. As growth prospects deteriorat­e in the wake of the virus, as well as domestic issues such as intensifie­d loadsheddi­ng, economists argue that the Reserve Bank has more room to cut interest rates at its meeting next week.

Business confidence fell to a 21year low at the start of 2020 with sentiment hit by weak demand, power cuts, deteriorat­ing government finances and coronaviru­s.

With the country’s growth prospects deteriorat­ing as a result of the spreading viral scourge and domestic issues such as intensifie­d load-shedding, economists say that the Reserve Bank has more room to cut interest rates at its meeting next week.

The latest RMB/BER business-confidence index released on Wednesday showed a slump to 18 points in the first quarter of 2020, according to RMB.

This is the lowest level since the second quarter of 1999, but the situation could worsen, according to RMB chief economist Ettienne le Roux as the prospectiv­e economic slowdown from the Covid-19 virus sets in.

The most immediate effect would come through global trade channels with SA exports and imports being hit, interrupti­ons to supply chains and damage to other sectors such as declining tourism flows, Le Roux said. “It will get worse the longer the virus persists,” he said.

The business-confidence index surveys 1,800 respondent­s across five sectors: manufactur­ers, building contractor­s, retailers, wholesaler­s and new vehicle dealers.

The index’s neutral mark is 50, with a reading below that considered to be negative. The most recent result means that more than 80% of respondent­s, surveyed from February 12 to March 2 believe business conditions to be unsatisfac­tory.

The index is not far off its lowest level of 12 points, reached during the 1980s at the height of political instabilit­y in SA, and for a period in the late 1990s when the prime interest rates shot to about 23%, said Le Roux.

Though the government had no fiscal space to provide stimulus to the economy, Le Roux said support could be offered by the central bank, which is due to make a decision on interest rates next week.

“To the extent that the central bank can lower interest rates under these kinds of conditions, that is where some support and stimulus will be forthcomin­g,” he said.

The Bank would have to forecasts, review its he growth “andsaid, and that inflation will determine what their next move will be”.

The Bank is expected to make these revisions as a host of financial institutio­ns re-evaluate their forecasts.

Banking group BNP Paribas said in a note on Wednesday that it expected the economy to contract by 0.2% in 2020 in the wake of continued domestic power cuts and what it saw as a looming global recession.

Alongside pressure on growth, as well as lower expectatio­ns for inflation, the Bank was likely to feel “growing pressure to cut [rates] amid co-ordinated global policy support”, said Jeffrey Schultz, senior economist at BNP Paribas SA.

BNP Paribas is forecastin­g cuts totalling 75 basis points for March, May and July, taking the repo rate to 5.5%.

THE CENTRAL BANK CAN LOWER INTEREST RATES ... THAT IS WHERE SOME SUPPORT AND STIMULUS WILL BE FORTHCOMIN­G

18 points the slump in the latest RMB/BER index

80% of survey respondent­s see business conditions as unsatisfac­tory

 ?? /Reuters ?? Had his chips: A worker at a fish and chips shop waits stoically for another bout of Eskom’s load-shedding to come to an end in Durban this Tuesday.
/Reuters Had his chips: A worker at a fish and chips shop waits stoically for another bout of Eskom’s load-shedding to come to an end in Durban this Tuesday.

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