East Mids profit warnings remain high

Six listed businesses in the East Midlands issued profit warnings in the first quarter of 2017, the same number as the previous quarter and one less than the same period of last year, according to EY’s latest Profit Warnings report.

In 2016, East Midlands quoted companies issued 19 profit warnings – the highest number recorded in over a decade.

Four of the profit warnings recorded in Q1 2017 in the East Midlands were from AIM-listed businesses.

Across the whole of the UK, quoted companies issued 75 profit warnings in Q1 2017, with only 13% of these warnings coming from the Midlands region. The West Midlands recorded four warnings in the first quarter of 2017.

The report says that UK profit warnings from industrial and commodity sectors have fallen significantly since the end of 2015, helped by a higher oil price and improving global economy. But, the impacts of a weaker pound and rising pricing pressures loom large. In Q1 2017, 28% of warnings cited rising costs and pressure on prices, compared with 15% in 2016. At the same time, uncertainty increasingly prevails, with 28% of warnings citing contract delays or cancellations – the highest proportion of warnings in more than five years.

Dan Hurd, director in EY’s restructuring team in the Midlands, said: “Improving global growth and the positive impact of a weaker pound on exports, combined with falling expectations in stressed areas, should limit the number of profit warnings in the near-term.

“However, increased overheads, political and regulatory change, and digital disruption are piling pressure on sectors with long-standing structural issues, especially in consumer and business services. Periods of rapid change often leave companies behind and the next few years are unlikely to prove an exception.”

Click here to sign up to receive our new South West business news...
Close