New Zealand business confidence regathered momentum at the start of the year, with a pick-up in the construction sector leading the way, according the National Bank's Business Outlook survey.
A net 28 per cent of survey respondents expect better times for the economy in the year ahead, up 11 points from the last survey in December, while a net 31 per cent of firms predict their own activity will improve, up 5 points.
A net 44 per cent of businesses expect a lift in residential construction-related work, up from 26 per cent in December, while commercial construction intentions turned positive a net 30 per cent of respondents picking growth, compared to 3.2 per cent expecting a contraction in December.
"The construction sector is now most confident in regard to the general business environment," Cameron Bagrie, the bank's chief economist, said in his report. "Canterbury dominates perceptions towards commercial construction" with the prospect of a looming rebuild stoking firms' optimism, he said.
The survey follows last month's quarterly survey of business opinion from the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research, which showed a slow-down in companies' own activity, and a dimming of business confidence in the tail-end of last year. The economic think-tank warned this quarter faced some weaknesses after businesses unexpectedly built up their inventories in the last three months of 2011.