Finance executives are less optimistic about the economy entering the second quarter of 2017 than they were entering 2017, according to the AFP April 2017 Corporate Cash Indicators.

In the latest CCI, a quarterly survey of corporate treasury and finance executives conducted by the Association for Financial Professionals, US businesses continued to build their cash reserves in the first quarter of 2017. This was not what they anticipated at the beginning of the year. Last quarter, finance executives suggested that they were, for the first time in many months, willing to deploy cash in Q1. However, new numbers reveal they did otherwise. The quarter-over-quarter index of +15, which measures actual changes in cash balances during the quarter, contrasts with the anticipated change for Q1 of -7 that was reported last quarter. The +15 reading was just one point lower than a year ago. The year-over-year indicator increased by 6 points to +16, showing that companies have continued to accumulate cash over the last 12 months.

The forward-looking indicator, measuring the expected change of cash holdings during the second quarter of 2017, increased 10 points to a reading of +3, signalling a continued softening in finance professionals' business confidence through the spring and an anticipated increase in cash holdings in the coming quarter. This was four points below its reading from a year ago.

Meanwhile, the indicator for short-term investment aggressiveness gained one point in the last quarter moving from -2 to -1, continuing to signal a more conservative posture with cash and short-term investments. These results are based on 212 responses.

In early 2017, for the first time in many months, finance professionals displayed a new sense of optimism about the economy, which AFP attributed to a new president promising a pro-business agenda. However, continued gridlock in Washington, plus heightened geopolitical risk in Syria and North Korea likely dampened the mood of finance executives.

"The rapid change in finance executives' outlook comes as little surprise given the sudden rise in economic and political uncertainty," said Jim Kaitz, president and chief executive of AFP. "Corporate treasury and finance executives are responding quickly, and prudently, to the new environment."

(Source: Association for Financial Professionals)