FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

People in New Zealand Increasingly Changing Spending Habits, Behaviors Due to Middle East Conflict, Westpac NZ Says

By

-- People in New Zealand are increasingly changing their spending habits and behaviors due to the Middle East conflict, according a report by Westpac NZ on Wednesday.

The bank said 84% of the people surveyed reported that they adjusted their behavior in response to the conflict, up from 74% of the people surveyed on March 19.

The survey was conducted by research platform Ideally on April 30, with 530 respondents aged between 18 and 80.

Over three-quarters of the respondents were worried about the impact of the conflict on their finances.

Of the respondents who have changed or are considering changing their behavior in the next six months, 41% said they were confident the changes will help them manage the impact of the conflict on their finances, compared with 24% who were unconfident.

The people cutting back on non-essential spending rose to 43% as of April 30 from 28% in March, while 51% are now driving less compared with 41% earlier. The survey also showed that 35% of the respondents changed how they shop for their groceries, up from 26% in March.

Westpac customers have reduced their card spend on the likes of clothing and restaurant meals to offset their higher fuel costs since the conflict began, Westpac NZ Chief Executive Catherine McGrath noted.

Nearly two-thirds of Westpac's home loan customers were more than three months ahead on their repayments at the end of March, up slightly on six months ago. The median customer was 10.6 months ahead.

Related Articles

Oil & Energy

EMEA Natural Gas Update: Futures Slip Amid Strong Renewables Output, Mild Weather

European natural gas futures opened lower on Wednesday with no major advances in the US-Iran conflict, while relatively strong renewables output displacing gas-fired generation and mild weather averting consumption from air conditioning were among influences.Dutch TTF futures were down 2.2% to 45.88 euros ($53.83) per megawatt hour while UK NBP futures fell 2.9% to 111.7 British pence ($1.52).ANZ Senior Commodities Analyst Daniel Hynes said in a daily update that cooler European temperatures and strong renewables output were one reason why its benchmark futures prices were not currently climbing.US President Donald Trump said in a social media post on Tuesday that he was pausing Project Freedom or the escort of ships through the Strait of Hormuz, at the request of mediator Pakistan and "other countries" while the US would continue to block access in and out of Iranian ports.Trump said that Project Freedom "will be paused for a short period of time to see whether or not the Agreement can be finalized and signed," in reference to a deal he is seeking with Iran, with the abandonment of its nuclear enrichment ambitions chief among his demands.Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Trump said that while higher, he said energy prices had not risen that dramatically and he said the higher prices were "a very small price to pay," to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.He said Iran's economy meanwhile was on the verge of collapse with galloping inflation, army salaries unpaid and a worthless currency. Trump also reiterated that Iranian negotiatorscontinued to engage keenly with the US behind the scenes while telling the public no such engagement was taking place.Analysts have grown somewhat immune to such messages with no significant progress on the single most pressing issue - the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz through which 20% of the world's oil and LNG-gas supplies flowed prior to the conflict.

Asia

SPML Infra Secures New Order Worth INR11.3 Billion; Shares Up 4%

SPML Infra (NSE:SPMLINFRA, BOM:500402) has bagged an order worth 11.3 billion Indian rupees from power producer NTPC (NSE:NTPC, BOM:532555), according to a Wednesday filing to the Indian stock exchanges.The contract is to develop a 1 GWh battery energy storage system (BESS) at NTPC's Barauni Thermal Power Station in Bihar, India. The company will undertake the supply, civil works, and erection of the 250 MW/1,000 MWh BESS, comprising 5 MWh DC containers with battery management system and thermal management system, and all associated accessories.The project will be executed over 18 months period, followed by 15 years of operation and maintenance.The company's shares were up nearly 4% in recent trade.

$BOM:500402$BOM:532555$NSE:NTPC$NSE:SPMLINFRA
Asia

Magni-Tech Industries to Buy Penang Land for MYR133 Million

Magni-Tech Industries (KLSE:MAGNI) unit Magni Land signed an agreement to acquire a freehold land parcel in Penang, Malaysia, according to a Tuesday filing with Bursa Malaysia.Shares of the apparel maker gained 1% in Wednesday's midday trade.The 19,080-square-meter property is being purchased from Neoh Choo Ee & Co. for 133.3 million ringgit.Magni-Tech intends to use the property for potential development or long-term investment.

$KLSE:MAGNI