New Zealand consumers kicked off the year in a better mood, but still appear to be "listless and fickle", according to ANZ New Zealand data.
Consumer confidence climbed to 116.1 this month from 108.4 in December according to the ANZ-Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence index, though seasonal adjustments account for the lift.
The current conditions index rose 11.3 points to 113.8, while the future conditions index gained 5.3 points to 117.6. That's the narrowest gap between expectations and reality since early 2009.
"Consumers appear to be taking a wait and see stance," ANZ chief economist Cameron Bagrie said in his commentary. "We see little in this month's survey that flags a pending change in listless and fickle consumer spending behaviour."
Households have been clamping down on spending since the nation clawed out of its deepest recession in a decade in 2010, and that tepid demand has put pressure on retailers to heavily discount stock to attract spending.