The Scotsman

Royal Mail letters arm feels impact of Brexit concerns

● Businesses rein in marketing mailings amid worries about UK’S exit from EU

- By MARTIN FLANAGAN

worries over Brexit sharply dented letter mailing in the nine months to Christmas as companies pulled a lot of their marketing post, Royal Mail revealed yesterday.

The privatised former stateowned monopoly said the number of addressed letters (excluding political parties’ election mailings) tumbled 6 per cent, while total letter revenues slid 5 per cent.

Royal Mail said: “We are seeing the impact of overall business uncertaint­y in the UK on letter volumes, in particular advertisin­g and business letters.”

The group first signalled an impact on its letters arm amid Brexit fears in its half-year results in November, when revenues from advertisin­g mail slumped 8 per cent.

It said yesterday the trend for marketing mail revenues had remained broadly similar in the third quarter.

On the fall in total letter revetomers nue, Royal Mail said: “We have seen the impact of low inflation on pricing and we continue to be affected by ongoing trends in downtradin­g.”

The poor outturn for the letters business was offset by a better performanc­e from its parcels business, where revenues rose 3 per cent and the number of parcels delivered was up 2 per cent. Combined parcels and letters revenues fell 2 per cent.

However, Royal Mail said its European parcels business, General Logistics Systems (GLS), saw a strong festive quarter and that the division’s revenues climbed 9 per cent over the nine-month period. It helped overall group-wide revenues to hold firm on a year earlier.

Moya Greene, chief executive of Royal Mail, said: “Our postmen and women delivered a great service at Christmas, even better than last year, with 138 million parcels handled in December alone.

“Our comprehens­ive planning, which started much earlier this year, enabled us to deliver this service for our cusbusines­s right across the UK.” While letter mailings have been in decline for some time, Royal Mail said Q3 was hit particular­ly hard as it also came up against an “unusually strong” Christmas a year earlier.

Its Parcelforc­e Worldwide business saw parcel numbers dip 1 per cent. Royal Mail said there was no decision yet over controvers­ial changes to its pension scheme announced earlier this month, which sparked union threats of potential strike action.

The group said it had launched a consultati­on with 90,000 staff over plans to switch workers in its final salary pension scheme to a less lucrative defined contributi­on plan.

Nicholas Hyett, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “Letters are in terminal decline and the parcels industry is looking increasing­ly crowded. Combined with uncertaint­y around the health of the wider UK economy, which has resulted in steadily falling business mailings, this makes for a pretty unpleasant background in which to be doing business.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom