The Guardian Australia

Serco expects bigger profits thanks to Covid test-and-trace work

- Kalyeena Makortoff

The outsourcin­g company Serco said has profits will be higher than expected in 2021 owing to greater demand from the UK government for its Covid-19 services, including test and trace.

Serco raised its full-year revenue guidance from £4.3bn to £4.4bn on Monday, helping underlying profits rise to at least £225m, up from previous forecasts of £200m.

The Hampshire-based company said the uplift could be explained by the fact the volume of its Covid-related work in the UK and Australia “has been higher and continued for longer than we anticipate­d”.

Serco runs large parts of the UK’s largely privatised test-and-trace service, which is labelled NHS test and trace. The firm runs a fifth of Covid-19 testing sites and half the tier 3 contact tracers, who are mostly required to phone the contacts of people who have tested positive.

That work was extended in June, when the company won a £322m contract to keep Covid-19 test centres running in England and Northern Ireland for another 12 months, with an option to add another six more.

In an update on Monday, Serco said immigratio­n-related contracts, particular­ly in the UK and Australia, had performed better than expected, as had healthcare insurance services in the US after Joe Biden’s administra­tion extended the enrolment period for registerin­g for subsidised health insurance coverage until mid-August.

Serco provides border control and immigratio­n services in the UK, which includes running the controvers­ial Yarl’s Wood immigratio­n removal centre in Bedfordshi­re.

However, Serco warned that the driving forces behind its stronger-thanexpect­ed performanc­e were unlikely to last. “We expect 2022 to see much lower demand for Covid-19 related services, partially offset by the impact of new work secured in 2021 and growth in our core non-Covid-19 related business,” the company said.

The outsourcin­g firm announced it would be spending £10m on additional payments for its 52,000 staff – worth £100 each – in response to their work during the pandemic, and would make a one-off contributi­on worth £4.8m to its people fund to help struggling employees.

Serco’s shares rose more than 1.9% on Monday morning to about 133p.

 ?? Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images ?? Serco runs a fifth of Covid-19 testing sites.
Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images Serco runs a fifth of Covid-19 testing sites.

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