
The latest Business Tendency Survey also said its ‘profitability indicator’ was neutral (+1 pp), an increase of 10 pp from last quarter. The majority of companies (57%) reported no change in profitability, with the remainder split evenly between increased and decreased profitability.
But the ‘input costs indicator’ was the most negative of the eight current indicators at ‐54 pp; more than half (55%) of companies reported increases and very few (2%) reported decreases. It was at a similar level in March (‐50 pp), indicating that input costs have continued to rise for the majority of businesses. In fact, it has been strongly negative since December 2016, when the survey was restarted, with the lowest level to date seen in June 2017 (-55 pp).

Input costs were at ‐63 pp for the non-finance sector with two‐thirds (63%) of companies reporting an increase in the latest quarter. This was in contrast to product prices (balance of +35 pp), for which only two‐fifths (38%) of non‐finance sector companies reported an increase. It stood at only -30pp for the finance sector.
The profitability indicator was slightly negative (‐5 pp), but 17 pp higher than last quarter. For the finance sector, it stood at +17 pp.
Finance companies were significantly more positive than non-finance companies in 5 of 8 current indicators.https://t.co/5fRTTx9By5pic.twitter.com/2gG8hCvCe4
— Statistics Jersey (@JsyStats) July 18, 2018
As for future indicators, the survey found that the outlook is positive for business activity over the next three months with +25 pp. A third (36%) of businesses are expected to see an increase in activity, with half (54%) seeing no change.