Yorkshire Post

Events company hit by cancellati­ons

Group says it will have an effect in the second half

- ROS SNOWDON CITY EDITOR ■ Email: ros.snowdon@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @RosSnowdon­YPN

BUSINESS: Tracsis, which helps run events such as Glastonbur­y and the British Grand Prix, said Covid-19 has had an immediate impact on events and traffic data business units, which will have a big impact on its second half performanc­e.

A number of large UK events have been cancelled, or postponed to the autumn.

TRACSIS, WHICH helps run prestigiou­s British events such as Glastonbur­y, The Grand National and the British Grand Prix, said Covid-19 has had an immediate impact on its events and traffic data business units, which will have a major impact on its second half performanc­e.

A number of large UK events have been cancelled, or postponed to the autumn, and Leedsbased Tracsis said this trend is continuing.

Both Glastonbur­y and The Grand National have been cancelled and a decision on whether to postpone the British Grand Prix will be made at the end of April.

Tracsis said it is too early to say what the impact will be, but it is working hard to help affected employees and to ensure that other parts of the business, such as the unaffected rail operations, continue to run smoothly.

Tracsis CEO, Chris Barnes, said: “Cheltenham Festival went ahead as planned. That was a success and that’s been paid which is great.

“Glastonbur­y and all horse racing has been cancelled for the time being. The Grand National is the biggest one of those which has been cancelled.

“A number of big events in the summer haven’t been cancelled, which is why we’ve not updated our forecasts.”

Tracsis has taken immediate action to mitigate the impact as much as possible through a reduction in casual labour costs, the redeployme­nt of staff, reducing all discretion­ary spend, and taking advantage of the Government’s Job Retention Scheme.

“The events business is very heavily gig economy labour driven,” said Mr Barnes.

“Over the summer we might have 2,000 to 5,000 staff supporting us across major events. Obviously, those staff won’t be recruited this year, so although the revenue will drop on our traffic and data side we can offset that because we’ve got a very variable and flexible labour cost.”

He said the group’s primary objective is maintainin­g jobs and a strong level of working capital.

Tracsis said it is keen to help out wherever it can.

“Interestin­gly, we are seeing hospitals and places like the Excel Centre asking for expertise on how to manage logistics and traffic movements,” said Mr Barnes.

“Bizarrely, new opportunit­ies are starting to emerge where we might be able to help. Clearly, if we can help, we will do so and bring back some of those casual labour members back into the team.”

The firm has not yet quantified what the cost of the virus will be, but it has a range.

“As soon as Boris Johnson stands up and announces what happens next, that will be the trigger for us to exactly quantify what the impact will be for the second half. The traffic and data division did £18m of revenue last year.

“Part of that group is not impacted, so what we do in Ireland isn’t impacted, but the traffic, data and events part are affected.

“£18m is the worst-case scenario.”

The virus outbreak overshadow­ed a successful first half for the group. Revenue rose 41 per cent to £26.4m in the six months to January 31 and operating profit before exceptiona­l items increased 8 per cent to £2.6m.

“The message to investors today is that nothing that is going on right now is structural­ly changing how we operate as a business,” said Mr Barnes.

“We are taking some shortterm actions, but as soon as this is over, we expect things to return pretty much to normal. We are trying to make sure we retain the skills, retain the people and minimise the costs through things like the Government’s Job Retention Scheme. So when things do switch back on, we are ready to go.”

The group’s rail business has performed strongly.

“The rail side is fully resilient.

We are seeing lots of enquiries and lots of work,” said Mr Barnes.

“We are trying to reassure everybody that the reason you invested in us in the first place is still there. Stick with us and it will come good again once we are out the other side of this.”

Tracsis is bidding for four large rail tenders, which should be announced over the coming weeks.

The tenders cover a software solution that Tracsis has been selling to train operators and another one covers smart ticketing. There are also two large opportunit­ies in the infrastruc­ture side of the business.

“We are not seeing any drop-off in demand from our rail customers,” said Mr Barnes.

“We expect to be able to announce, over the coming weeks, a number of new contracts, which hopefully gives everybody confidence that our business is going to continue to do what it has always done.”

Tracsis has already furloughed over 100 staff under the Government scheme.

“That side of the business is generally lower paid staff so the scheme covers the majority of their costs,” said Mr Barnes.

Stick with us, it will come good again once we are out the other side.

Chris Barnes, chief executive of Tracsis

 ?? PICTURE: BEN BIRCHALL/PA WIRE ?? NO SOUND OF MUSIC: Major events such as Glastonbur­y have been cancelled or postponed which has had an immediate impact on the events and traffic data business units at Tracsis. The group said it is working hard to help affected employees.
PICTURE: BEN BIRCHALL/PA WIRE NO SOUND OF MUSIC: Major events such as Glastonbur­y have been cancelled or postponed which has had an immediate impact on the events and traffic data business units at Tracsis. The group said it is working hard to help affected employees.

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