Consumer confidence has plunged to levels last seen during the Covid-19 pandemic when lockdowns and an alcohol ban was in place.
This is according to the latest FNB/BER Consumer Confidence Index, for the first quarter of 2023.
The latest reading of -23 points is also the third lowest reading on record since 1994.
FNB Chief economist Mamello Matikinca-Ngwenya says consumers are under extreme pressure.
The latest reading is broadly in line with the extraordinarily weak consumer confidence level recorded during the third quarter of 2020 (also -23, during a time of level 3 COVID restrictions, alcohol bans, school closures and curfews), as well as the second quarter of 2022 (-25, when deadly floods devastated KZN and the economic ramifications of the Ukrainian war started to manifest). The reading of -23 is the third lowest CCI reading on record since 1994 and indicative of extreme concern among consumers about South Africa’s economic prospects and their household finances.
Details
All three sub-indices of the CCI declined dramatically during the first quarter of 2023. The economic outlook and time-to-buy durable goods sub-indices of the CCI dropped by 15 and 17 index points respectively, and, at -34, are now both deep in negative territory.
The vast majority of consumers therefore expect a deterioration in South Africa’s economic growth over the next 12 months and consider the present time as highly inappropriate to purchase durable goods (e.g. vehicles, furniture, household appliances and electronic goods).
The household financial outlook sub-index of the CCI fell 14 index points to -1 during the first quarter, reversing the gains made during the 2022 festive season.
While consumers no longer expect their household finances to improve over the next year, they are nevertheless considerably less pessimistic about their own financial prospects compared to their gloomy expectations for the economy in general.
A more detailed breakdown of the CCI shows that the confidence levels of high-income households (earning more than R20 000 per month) deteriorated the most during the first quarter, crashing from -10 to -31 index points.
Bar the reading of -33 recorded during the initial panicked level 5 lockdown period in 2020Q2, this is the lowest reading for high-income confidence since the commencement of the series in 1995.
Affluent consumers are especially concerned about the outlook for the economy, with this sub-index nosediving from -18 to a new historic low of -51 in the first quarter.
The consumer confidence levels of middle-income households (earning between R5 000 and R20 000 p.m.) dropped from -6 to -21, while low-income confidence (earning less than R5 000 p.m.) slumped from -6 to -17 index points.
The alarming increase in power outages since December and the concomitant deterioration in South Africa’s economic prospects no doubt rocked consumer sentiment during the first quarter. Spiralling food prices, another interest rate hike and a sharp depreciation in the rand exchange rate likely added insult to injury. However, further job creation in the still-recovering services sector may have softened the blow to low- and middle-income confidence.
Bottom line
The big drop in the FNB/BER Consumer Confidence Index mirrors the substantial deterioration in retailer sentiment during the first quarter (with the BER’s retailer confidence index contracting from 42 to 34 index points, the weakest level since 2020Q2).
“The about-turn in consumer confidence points to a marked decline in consumers’ willingness to spend and foreshadows a significant slowdown in real consumer spending growth relative to the surprisingly strong rate recorded during the fourth quarter. The fact that high-income confidence declined the most is doubly alarming for the outlook for household expenditure, as affluent consumers also have the greatest spending power,” said Matikinca-Ngwenya.
With an increasing number of high-income households now investing (at considerable cost) in solar power and other backup power systems, these consumers will in all likelihood need to slash their discretionary spending in order to balance their budgets.
Consequently, sales volumes of big-ticket durable goods items such as new vehicles, furniture and household appliances are likely to face increased pressure in coming months, although replacement purchases of electronic goods due to load-shedding related breakdowns should counter some of the adverse impact.
With some upward (recovery) momentum still buffering the services sector (e.g. hotels, restaurants, transport, recreation and tourism related services), the retail sector will likely bare the brunt of the impact of the consumer confidence collapse.
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