The Governor of the Reserve Bank is suggesting people remain
calm in the face of the Covid-19 pandemic. He said the NZ economy is in a
"wonderful starting position" to face a "horrible
situation".
For me, the Governor's "Don't panic" message has a
tinge of Lance Corporal Jack Jones from Dad's Amy about it.
Its times like this when one appreciates the conventional,
bland, vanilla type of bank governor that were his predecessors -
the type who has a low profile and only says something when they have something
worthwhile to say. The result was those words carried a certain amount of
gravitas.
I wonder if Mr Orr's keep calm message will have less
impact because of a rather colourful and unconventional start to his term as
Governor.
Economist Cameron Bagrie has said people were starting to
talk about Orr more than the Reserve Bank itself. Part of the eye-brow raising
has been due to the Governor's aggressive 0.5% cut to the OCR in August last
year. Part is due to the slanging match he has engaged in - an email duel with
some of his critics. And part is due to his rather elaborate and imaginative
analogy comparing the Reserve Bank to the eco-system of Tāne Mahuta, the giant
kauri tree. I think its fair to say that most money-centric people are actually
a little more grounded in their views and reacted with a "that's pretty
weird", as I did, when I heard the tree analogy commentary.
In truth, the Tāne Mahuta comments can be dismissed as PC
nonsense, but perception is important, and more so when that perception is of
the leader of a country's central bank. My perception is such that when the
Governor of the Reserve Bank says don't panic, I salute and say "yes, sir,
Corporal Jones".
My inclination is to favour the view of other economists,
like those at the BNZ when they say a recession is now probable, and we
shouldn't expect the Government to be able to do anything to turn it around.
The sudden decline of sharemarkets everywhere is perhaps the
best pointer to the flow-on financial impacts of Covid-19. Whether the mania is
justified or not is academic (and when supermarket shoppers come to blows over
toilet papers one cannot help but conclude the response has become irrational)
the effects are real. Business profits will be affected, so the value of the
businesses will be worth less (given their value is nothing more than the
discounted value of their future income streams). That's why companies like
Boeing have fallen in value by 40%.
The optimistic scenario is that the lower profits will be
short-term (no more than a year). The issue for the most vulnerable companies
will be whether they can remain viable until the crisis passes.
My take on it is the Governor's don’t panic message is the
correct stance for consumers, but I doubt anyone is taking much notice. Businesses
will have to do what they always do - adapt to survive and plan to thrive.
Frank Newman, a writer and investment analyst, is a former local body councillor.
Frank Newman, a writer and investment analyst, is a former local body councillor.
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