The Kākā by Bernard Hickey
The Kākā by Bernard Hickey
Liquidations surge to near post-GFC highs
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Liquidations surge to near post-GFC highs

Almost 3,000 company liquidations in 2025, highest since 2010; Petone's Soprano restaurant & others in Wellington & Christchurch close; Inflation much higher for poorest, pensioners & beneficiaries

Briefly in Aotearoa’s political economy on Tuesday, February 3:

  1. The Lead: Just when the Government is hoping voters will feel the ‘green shoots’ of an economic recovery ahead of the November 7 election, the headlines are instead showing another surge in company liquidations and cost of living pressures. Paying subscribers can see more detail below the paywall fold and hear more analysis in the podcast above.

  2. The Sidebar: The liquidations are linked in part to the IRD’s crackdown on overdue tax debts and Covid loans. Four years of falling-to-flat house prices have also proven the death knell for many ‘zombie’ small businesses dependent on home equity withdrawals to get through the rough years.

  3. News elsewhere: Auckland Transport CEO Dean Kimpton has resigned after three years without a replacement and DOC’s Director General Penny Nelson has decided not to seek reappointment.

  4. Chart Pack of the Day: Stats NZ’s Housing Living Costs Indices published yesterday showed the poorest 20% of households, beneficiaries and pensioners experienced significantly higher inflation in the last year than the Consumer Price Index inflation measure of 3.1% reported last month, and higher than the 0.8% experienced by the richest 20%, who benefited from lower mortgage costs.

  5. Scoop of the Day: Kate Newton reports for RNZ that Woodend in North Canterbury has become the second town that AA Insurance is withdrawing from after Westport, although this time it is for earthquake risk rather than climate-change-drive flood risk.

  6. Today’s Deep-dive of the Day is from Amy Williams at RNZ about an Auckland Council plan to change one of its flood buyout policies to avoid having to buy out 13 homes for $14 million that were damaged in the 2023 floods.

Join us as a paying subscriber to get more analysis and detail below the paywall fold and in the podcast above. Paying subscribers can also comment below and join The Kākā community in webinars and our chat room. Paying subscribers also enable me to do this journalism. If paying subscribers ask in the comments below and ‘like’ the article more than 100 times, I will open it up for full public reading, listening and sharing later today.

IRD crackdown lifts liquidations to 16-year high

PM Christopher Luxon’s key question to himself, his party and voters at large in his State of the Nation speech last month was whether the economic recovery he claims responsibility for would happen fast enough and broadly enough for most voters to ‘feel it’ by the election on November 7.

The green shoots evident in business and consumer confidence surveys and building consents have yet to generate employment growth, while retail spending remains moribund at best, by most measures. But the Government is also having to contend with the lagged effects of the last two years of recessionary quarters, a delayed crackdown on Covid and other tax debts by IRD, along with the inevitable closure of ‘zombie’ small businesses kept alive for decades by equity withdrawal from ever-rising residential land values, given they have yet to bounce from their 2022 lows that remain 10-20% below their peaks.

These lagged effects are coming home to roost now through the liquidation and mortgagee sales figures. Credit ratings firm Centrix detailed a rise in liquidations to a 16-year high in calendar 2025 in its January report published this morning.

“Rising liquidations underscore ongoing financial strain across parts of the economy, as well as the IR’s ongoing crackdown on outstanding debts. Company failures are now at their highest level since 2010, with hospitality, retail trade, transport and construction seeing significant increases.” Centrix Chief Operating Officer Monika Lacey in Centrix’s January Credit Indicator Report

Lacey pointed out business liquidations increased unevenly, with the sharpest rises in hospitality (+50%), retail trade (+34%) and transport (+27%). Companies in construction (+13%), manufacturing (+12%) and property/rental (+17%) also recorded higher liquidations, despite a decline in credit defaults and an improvement in average credit scores.

Centrix’s January Credit Indicator Report
Centrix’s January Credit Indicator Report

New restaurant closures

The drumbeat of business closure news continues to lead newspapers and television and radio bulletins too. That includes the closure of renowned Petone restaurant, Soprano, and Newtown’s Rice Bowl Burger Bar, along with BBQ specialist The Smoking Que in Christchurch in items published today in The Post and The Press.

IRD’s data shows a rise in tax debt to nearly $9 billion by the middle of last year from under $4 billion in 2020.

IRD tax debt data

Chart pack of the day: Inflation hits some harder than others

Poorest feel inflation of 3.7%, while richest feel 0.8%

Stats NZ’s Household living cost indices data to December 2025

Poorest spend three times more on power than rich, as a share of income

Stats NZ’s Household living cost indices data to December 2025

Rent inflation higher than housing costs overall for 12 of last 16 years

Stats NZ’s Household living cost indices data to December 2025

Picks n’ Mixes of the best of the rest elsewhere

Scoops & Deep-dives

Politics & the economy

Housing, infrastructure & councils

Poverty, health, living costs, incomes & education

Climate & environment


Cartoon of the Day: Stuck in the mud

Daron Parton for NZ Herald-$

Ka kite ano,

Bernard

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