South African Business confidence recovers some lost ground in third quarter

[divider style=”solid” top=”20″ bottom=”20″][dropcap]A[/dropcap]fter falling from 18 to an all-time low of five in the second quarter, the RMB/BER Business Confidence Index (BCI) rebounded to 24 in the third quarter. From such a low base, when the strictest of lockdowns took effect, this improvement is not entirely unexpected.

Even so, while the outcome is pleasing, sentiment remains heavily depressed; almost eight out of every ten business executives surveyed regard prevailing business conditions as unsatisfactory.

The third quarter survey was conducted online between 12 and 31 August. It covered about 1 800 executives spread across building, manufacturing and the domestic trade sectors i.e. the retail, wholesale and motor trade.

The fieldwork for the third quarter survey covered the period immediately following the announcement by the president of moving the country to the less restrictive level 2 on 17 August. It was also completed before the renewed onset of widespread load shedding.

Details
Of the five sectors making up the composite RMB/BER BCI, the rebound in wholesale confidence by 29 points to 33 in the third quarter was the largest. A vibrant agricultural sector (that boosted certain consumer goods sales) and a further recovery in international trade are two key factors that drove the increase in wholesale confidence.

After falling to 11 in the second quarter, retail sentiment improved by a sizeable 25 points to 36. Yet, this improvement was only partially driven by increased sales volumes. Other factors that also helped to lift confidence were expectations of better times ahead, further progress made in reducing costs (particularly through slashing inventories) and an uptick in turnovers (thanks to somewhat stronger sales volumes and widespread but small selling price increases).

Manufacturing confidence rebounded to 22 in the third quarter, up from six in the second quarter and 17 in the first quarter. Despite this improvement, weak demand, supply chain disruptions and intermittent temporary factory closures due to positive COVID-19 cases all continued to put a damper on the growth in domestic sales and production.

Motor dealer confidence jumped from a mere two points to 16, taking the index back to the same low level of the first quarter. Although new vehicle sales recovered somewhat, they remained disappointingly weak.

Having fallen from 15 to just two in the second quarter, building confidence recovered to 14 in the third quarter. Other than increased spending on maintenance and work-fromhome related renovations and improvements, projects for building contractors and subcontractors in the residential property market remained limited.

Equally, activity in the nonresidential property market showed little improvement – an outcome that is understandable given, for example, the high and rising vacancy rates in office space.

Also Read

Trade sector in South Africa: Confidence edges up in Q3

Maersk launches its cold store in South Africa

theafricalogistics

Recent Posts

Google Stock Surges as Investor Confidence Grows Following Tech Sector Rally

Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL), the parent company of Google, saw its shares surge on Friday,…

2 days ago

Is a 2.8% COLA Enough to Beat Inflation in 2026?

The Social Security Administration (SSA) has confirmed a 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) for 2026, impacting…

2 days ago

How Alaska Airlines’ Outage Exposed a Hidden Risk for African Airlines

Alaska Airlines was forced to cancel more than 360 flights after a major IT outage…

2 days ago

Inside Tesla’s Q3 Earnings Miss: Price Cuts, Profit Drops, and the Robotaxi Gamble

Tesla’s third-quarter 2025 results painted a challenging picture for the EV giant. Despite strong delivery…

4 days ago

Inside Meta’s AI Reshuffle: Why 600 Jobs Were Cut in the Race Toward Superintelligence

In a bold restructuring move, Meta Platforms Inc. has laid off around 600 employees from…

4 days ago

SASSA November 2025 Payment Schedule: Key Dates, Policy Insights, and What Beneficiaries Should Expect

As South Africa prepares for the November 2025 grant cycle, millions of social grant beneficiaries…

7 days ago