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Our customer focused team will listen to your needs and tailor innovative solutions to proactively add value to your business.

Choose a fixed price monthly plan or select just the services you need:

Fixed Price Monthly Plans

Sick of a big accounting bill at the end of the year and very little in the meantime? Many of our clients are switching to fixed price monthly plans for regular accounting action, advice with no unpleasant fee surprises!

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Accounting Services

We offer a full suite of services including:

1. Cost-out / productivity reviews
2. Strategic and tactical planning
3. Break-even analysis
4. Profit forecasting
5. Tax planning
6. GST, PAYE, FBT, RWT return preparation

To enable better management of your cash-flow, you can elect to pay your accounting fees by monthly A/P. Financing options are also available.

Call Greg now on 09 520 5100 to discuss your business.

We can further tailor the packages depending on your specific business needs. We can also provide fixed prices for sole traders, trusts, LAQCs and associations.

Call on 09 520 5100 or e-mail us info@cabbagetree.net.nz to discuss your requirements.

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Get started with Cabbage Tree for as little as $200/mth. Call us today on 09 520 5100 for a FREE, no obligation chat.

Ratings downgrade explained
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Author: Greg Byers

A ratings downgrade is never ideal. Depending on who you believe, it could be an indictment on the government’s fiscal control of the economy, likewise it could be seen as the ratings agency being more sensitive to total net external debt (that is, private sector debt).

Effectively what it means is that the perceived ability of New Zealand to be able to pay back debt has been impeded from where it sat before the downgrade.

Traditional economics would tell us that the downgrade means an increased credit risk, vis-à-vis an increased cost of borrowing (for us – business and mortgage debt), and capital flight from foreign investors into safe haven countries (those with the highest credit rating). The capital flight would then push down our exchange rate, making it more expensive for us to buy from overseas, but easier for exporters to sell their products internationally.

As I say, that’s what traditional economics would tell us, and sorry if it was getting too jargonesk. What’s more interesting is to study those traditional indicators, and to see what’s really happening.

Before the Standard and Poors, as well as Fitch downgrade, NZ to US dollars were trading around $0.76, today it’s trading at, well, give or take $0.76 – there was a slight dip in the middle there, but it appears the currency has remained materially stable.

What about the thing that matters to most of us – interest rates? Well Darren Gibbs from Deutsche Bank has said that the “at the margin, it will probably raise the cost of funding but, in the scheme of things, it's not that huge", meaning we may well see a flow on of increased interest rates, but it’s unlikely to be material.

In an interesting turn of events, there is widespread speculation that the credit rating downgrade could keep the Official Cash Rate (OCR) down at 2.50% for a longer period of time. Which could see interest rates staying lower over the medium term – though I cogitate.

Yes, the government is spending too much on areas such as working for families and interest free student loans, and yes, private savings in New Zealand suck. In saying that, in the first time in a decade household consumption as a percentage of income has dropped below 100% (from a peak of 108%).

The reality is, we still hold an AA rating with a stable outlook, and we are just squabbling over the degree of excellence that we enjoy. 

  • “Greg has learned so much about our business and added considerable value in a very short space of time and. His knowledge and on-going support is invaluable” Read More Helen Mackenzie - Director - Kapiti Candies