Daily Mail

Worst is over for Regus as workers trickle back

- By Francesca Washtell

THE boss of office provider IWG has insisted ‘the worst is behind us’ after the number of inquiries about its shared work spaces shot back to prepandemi­c levels.

IWG offers serviced, open-plan offices and meeting rooms that can be booked by the hour.

Chief executive Mark Dixon said that after a year of remote working, March and April had marked an ‘inflection point’ for many companies that are now plotting to bring people back to the office.

This is still expected to take some time as many firms will be loath to rush the process and over-commit to renting space in case stricter social distancing requiremen­ts come back. But the Regus owner said it was benefiting from demand for satellite offices outside major cities and away from company HQs

Interest in the London suburbs has been stronger than for the centre, while in the US, inquiries for Florida and Texas have surpassed those for New York. During the first quarter it signed deals with big-name clients such as Japanese telecoms group NTT and banking giant Standard Chartered.

But investors remain sceptical. IWG fell 0.9pc, or 3.2p, to 359.8p, as it also revealed that revenues slumped by 24pc to £528m in the first quarter.

Sanctuary Spa and Original Source- owner PZ Cussons also failed to rouse shareholde­rs despite turnover in the third quarter rising 5pc to £145m and business in all regions outdoing the previous year.

It has been boosted by strong demand for hygiene products such as soap during the pandemic, but fell 0.7pc, or 2p, to 266.5p.

Holiday group Jet2 was a hit – rising 3pc, or 42.5p, to 1458p – as it said customers were leaving it until the last minute to book trips in case travel rules changed. It has pencilled in a loss of up to £385m in the year to March 31.

A lukewarm update from engineerin­g and industrial software maker Aveva was eclipsed by the shock announceme­nt that boss Craig Hayman will be leaving to be replaced by a representa­tive from the biggest shareholde­r, Schneider Electric.

Hayman is quitting after three years, returning home to the US.

Schneider owns 60pc of Aveva’s shares, and the highly unusual move to replace a boss with an investor rep who is being ‘ seconded’ to the role has prompted speculatio­n that it is plotting a full takeover.

Aveva slumped 5.4pc, or 212p, to 3695p, weighing down on the wider FTSE 100, which closed 0.3pc lower, down 18.15 points, at 6944.57. The FTSE 250 fell 0.6pc, or 144.26 points, to 22,433.08.

A slip in gold prices below $1.78 an ounce dragged on the share prices of major miners Polymetal (down 2.8pc, or 44.5p, to 1559.5p) and Fresnillo (down 2.2pc, or 20.2p, to 886.6p).

But copper prices climbed to their highest level in a decade, surpassing $9,795 a tonne, nearing all-time highs as worries about supply sent traders into a frenzy.

Elsewhere, smoke detector and automatic door sensor-maker Halma dipped 1.1pc, or 29p, to 2601p after it bought a firm that monitors mothers and babies during childbirth.

Perigen’s software technology can alert doctors, nurses and midwives to potential problems.

Test and Trace outsourcer Serco has clinched contracts worth £350m from the Department for Work and Pensions to run ‘backto-work’ services for jobseekers.

It came a day after a Serious Fraud Office trial of former Serco executives over a prisoner tagging scandal was dropped because the crime watchdog failed to disclose evidence to the defence. Serco rose 1.7pc, or 2.4p, to 143.8p.

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