Title: Australia and New Zealand
1Australia and New Zealand
Keith Kirkham A/Senior Commercial Officer
CS Australia/NZ
2Outline
- The Good Story
- The AUSFTA
- Some Key Opportunities in Australia and New
Zealand
- How to Begin
3Differences Obvious Subtle
- Counter-seasonal
- Multicultural with European patterns
- Indigenous Supply
- Influence in the Region
4Misconceptions
5This Country Is a Continent
6Australia Population Density
Australia is the 7th most urbanized country in
the world.
More than 80 of population in this ring
7The Good Story
- Strong, Resilient Economy
- Ease of Doing Business
- Purchasing Power
- A-US Free Trade Agreement
8The Economy
- 15th year expansion
- Low Inflation/Low unemployment
- High Capacity Utilization and Capex
- Forecast 3.25 growth
9Americas Strong Trade Position
- American exports to Australia 17.7 billion
- in 2006
- U.S. trade surplus with Australia approx US8
billion
- U.S. is major foreign supplier15.2 of the
import market
10The Market Drivers Australia
- Commodity Prices strong Asian demand
- Infrastructure spending to add capacity
- Trading partner growth
11Role of Resources
12Aus Mining Capacity
13Aus Adding Capacity
14Drought
- Shaving almost 1 off GDP growth
- During high commodity prices
- Crop yields 50 or less than normal
- Water use and major projects
15Suddenly, Im Thirsty
16Market Drivers New Zealand
- Commodity Prices (e.g. dairy)
- F/X
- Trading Partners Economies
- In Migration
- Tourism
17New Zealand Risks
- Oil prices
- Strong NZ drags export economy
- Highly Leveraged consumers shift demand from
consumer to industrial spending
18Australia Risks
- Oil prices
- Continued Drought
- Labor shortage/wage inflation
19Strong A and NZ Effects
- Drags export growth and revenue in F/X sensitive
areas
- Increases U.S. exporter price advantage, Aussie
and Kiwi purchasing power
20Ease of Doing Business
- Sophisticated Market
- World Class infrastructure
- Politically stable
- Excellent IPR regime
- Transparent processes
- Technology intensive
21Purchasing Power
22Purchasing Power Getting Richer Quicker
- Terms of trade rose 13
- Real Gross Domestic Income (GDI) 5.2
- National income growth among highest in the
developed world (higher than US or Japan)
23Australia-U.S. Free Trade Agreement
- Major Benefits for U.S. Companies
- Tariff Reduction
- eliminated on 99 of manufactured goods
- eliminated all agricultural tariffs, distilled
spirits
- Intellectual Property (strengthened protection)
- Access to Australian Government procurement
- Investment access improved
24AUSFTA vs NAFTA
- Like NAFTA
- Uses rules of origin and calculations for
regional value
- Unlike NAFTA
- Onus on importer not exporter
- No prescribed certificate form
25Qualifying U.S. Goods
- An Originating Good Must Be
- Wholly obtained or produced entirely in the
United States (e.g vegetables harvested in U.S.)
- Produced in the United States wholly from other
originating materials from either Australia or
the United States or
- Produced in the United States partly from
non-originating materials, but meeting the
requirements of the origin rules
26Australia Financial Services
- Total turnover in financial markets A68.9
billion,
- Largest, most liquid stock market in
Asia-Pacific, after Japan
- Australia's investment fund asset pool the
largest in Asia, 4th largest in the world
- Funds under management reached A839 (US648)
billion in March 2005 and will reach A2.5
trillion by 2015.
27Opportunities
- Australia
- Infrastructure Projects
- Medical Devices
- Information Technology Services
- Construction Machinery
- Oil and Gas Field Machinery
- Water Technologies
-
- New Zealand
- Infrastructure Projects
- Power Generation/Electricity
- Supply Chain technologies (RFID)
- Agricultural applications
- Food Processing and Packaging
28Agribusiness Opportunity Fieldays 2007
- New Zealand Fieldays 115,000 visitors and 1,000
exhibitors.
- U.S. Pavilion
- Event runs June 13 16, 2007 Hamilton, New
Zealand
- CS New Zealands Webinars
- www.fieldays.co.nz
29New Zealand Agriculture
30How to Begin
- Assess Market
- Determine Modifications to Product Business
Model if Necessary
- Determine Appropriate Scale
- Market Entry Plan Find Distributor
- Promotional Opportunities (e.g. trade shows)
31Due Diligence Advised
32Contact Us
- U.S. Commercial Service
- U.S. Consulate General
- 19-29 Martin Place, 59 MLC Centre
- Sydney NSW 2000
- http//www.BuyUSA.gov/australia
- Tel. 61-2-9373-9205 Fax. 61-2-9221-0573