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High costs continue to damage local firms

High costs continue to damage local firms

Wednesday 11 October 2017

High costs continue to damage local firms

Wednesday 11 October 2017


Jersey-based businesses are reporting significantly higher costs - combined with falling profits for those outside of the finance sector - in the latest set of official stats.

57% of non-finance firms said the costs of doing business had gone up in the last quarter, which then hits their profitability - 36% reported profits had fallen in the same period.

Non-finance sector stats

 

Meanwhile, the picture was better in financial services, where 19% reported higher costs, and 32% registered higher profits. 

Finance sector Stats

The Business Tendency Survey, which is published by the independent Statistics Unit also showed that business activity seemed to be slowing when compared to previous surveys:

Activity Stats

The Stats Unit summarised the last quarter's results as follows:

"In September 2017:

  • the headline all-sector business activity indicator was +7 percentage points (pp); this means the proportion of businesses reporting an increase was 7 pp greater than those reporting a decrease;

  • the business activity indicator was significantly lower than three months ago, when it was +25 pp;

  • six out of the eight current indicators were positive; only profitability and input costs were negative;

  • the product prices and business optimism indicators were both positive, but both were slightly lower than last quarter;

  • three indicators changed by more than 10 pp; the business activity indicator decreased 18 pp to a slightly positive +7 pp, and new business decreased from +23 pp to +12 pp, whereas the input costs indicator was less negative, rising from -55 pp to -39 pp;

  • the profitability indicator was positive for the finance sector, indicating more companies reported increases in profits than decreases, while it was negative for other sectors;

  • 44% of companies reported higher input costs, producing a strongly negative indicator of -39 pp; this was more acute for the non-finance sector, where over half (57%) of businesses reported higher costs;

  • the wholesale and retail sector had indicators of -57 pp for input costs and +51 pp for product prices, indicating that the sector has broadly started passing on its higher costs to consumers;

  • the finance sector was more positive than the non-finance sector; five of the eight indicators relating to the current situation were more positive for the finance sector, two of them by over 20 pp;

  • the all-sector future business activity indicator was positive, with the finance sector being strongly positive about future business and the non-finance sector being neutral;

  • the outlook for future employment was positive overall, driven by the strongly positive finance sector, while the non-finance sector was neutral."

You can read through the full statistics here. 

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