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Consumers put the brakes on spending in April as the high cost of living and war in Iran put pressure on households.
Statistics NZ data today showed retail spending using debit, credit, and charge cards fell 1.3% when compared with March. There were declines across the board, including on consumables, hospitality, durables, clothing, and fuel.
In actual terms, cardholders made 168 million transactions in April, with an average value of $55 per transaction. The total amount spent using electronic cards was $9.2 billion.
Yesterday, other data showed negative sentiment in the services sector with smaller firms finding higher fuel prices difficult to manage. Overall, the BNZ–BusinessNZ Performance of Services Index was at 48.9 in April, compared with 46.2 in March. A reading below 50 indicated the sector was in contraction.
Milk processor Synlait has appointed former Sanford chief financial officer Katherine Turner as an independent director.
The appointment restores Synlait’s board to the required complement of two independent directors after the departure of Paul McGilvary on Monday.
Synlait chair George Adams said Turner’s financial acumen and commercial experience made her an exceptional choice for the role.
“Her ability to drive operational performance alongside strategic transformation will be invaluable as we work to accelerate Synlait’s financial recovery,” he said.
Before joining Sanford as CFO in 2018, where she served for three years, Turner was a senior executive at Fonterra for nearly 12 years, latterly as commercial director for Fonterra Brands.
At Synlait, Turner will also chair the audit and risk committee.