New Zealand business confidence fell for a third month as the world's economic troubles started hitting home with local firms, and companies wound back their expected earnings for the coming year.
The National Bank Business Outlook survey showed a net 13.2 per cent of firms are expecting a pick-up in the economy over the next 12 months, down from a net 30.3 per cent a month earlier in last month's survey.
Leading the pessimistic tone was a warning on earnings, with a net 1.6 per cent of firms predicting improved profits, compared to a net 15.2 per cent in September.
"The sacrificial lamb in this survey has been profits," chief economist Cameron Bagrie said in his report. "This does not augur well for investment and employment, critical elixirs of sustained economic expansions."
The survey picks up on the downbeat tone of the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research's September quarterly survey of business opinion, which showed firms see the economy as flat-lining Yesterday, the government's pre-election update showed the Treasury's growth forecasts are still largely intact, though the speed wobbles hitting the global economy has put them on notice.