Bank of New Zealand - Latest News [Page 21]
Business Pessimism Grows - BNZ Weekly Overview
Friday, 24 January 2003, 9:55 am | Bank of New Zealand
Apart from further appreciation in the NZD over the past week and more titbits of information coming out of Iraq, the two main points of interest for us economists this week were Tuesday’s release of the NZIER’s Quarterly Survey of Business Opinion ... More >>
NZD Finally Gets Comfortable Over 50 Cents
Tuesday, 17 December 2002, 11:05 am | Bank of New Zealand
News of the week has to be the rise in the NZD to over US 51 cents and almost 91 cents against the Australian dollar. First, why has the NZD been rising since early this year and second, why this most recent push upward? More >>
Overseas Influences On Our Economy
Thursday, 5 December 2002, 10:07 pm | Bank of New Zealand
We enter 2003 in a continuing state of uncertainty about how our largely robust domestic economy will be buffeted or boosted by events offshore. Three key routes by which develops offshore influence us are canvassed here. More >>
NZ Fundamentals Okay – Provided World Recovers
Monday, 2 December 2002, 9:44 am | Bank of New Zealand
In theory all the bad news we have been receiving from overseas in the past few months should not just have depressed business and consumer confidence as we saw in the middle of this year. We should still be in that depressed state given 40% of our ... More >>
Staggering Apartment Boom
Thursday, 28 November 2002, 8:33 am | Bank of New Zealand
Statistics New Zealand released monthly data showing the number of consents issued for the construction of dwellings around New Zealand. During October the number of apartment consents sky-rocketed to 1,526 from 485 in September. This was a record ... More >>
Household Debt Levels Take Off
Tuesday, 26 November 2002, 3:53 pm | Bank of New Zealand
The Reserve Bank released monthly data on lending to the business, rural and household sectors. In October debt outstanding to the business sector was up 1.1% from a year ago from 0.1% growth in September and 5.6% a year earlier. We economists tend not ... More >>