Yorkshire Post

Recruitmen­t giants face decline in fee income owing to lockdown

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RECRUITERS PAGEGROUP and Robert Walters have revealed plunging fee income in the UK and worldwide as lockdowns globally saw hiring grind to a halt.

Britain was among the worst affected, with PageGroup revealing gross profits slumped 61.5 per cent between April and June, while Robert Walters saw a 34 per cent decline in the UK.

PageGroup said it has axed 713 jobs since the start of the year amid efforts to slash its cost base by up to a quarter in response to the crisis, with 531 fee-earning roles going between April and June alone – mainly across the UK and Americas.

It said most staff impacted by the cuts were recent joiners and inexperien­ced in recruitmen­t, or those on performanc­e review.

But it added it ended its temporary pay cut for staff on July 1.

The firm saw overall group profit nearly halve, down 47.6 per cent in the second quarter as firms put recruitmen­t on freeze across all major economies.

The UK – which accounts for around 11 per cent of fees – was by far the worst affected division in the second quarter, followed by the Americas with a 55 per cent drop in gross profits, then Europe, Middle East and Africa with a 43 per cent fall and Asia Pacific down 42 per cent. But Page said despite the grim second quarter, it began to see green shoots of recovery with hiring activity levels starting to pick up in several of its markets.

Robert Walters added that it saw hiring significan­tly impacted across the regions in the UK, but holding up better in London.

Overall global net fee income fell 34 per cent to £71.1m in the second quarter. It also moved to cut costs by nearly a fifth, with a 5 per cent cut in its headcount to 3,734.

Chief executive and founder, Robert Walters, said: “As I indicated in our first quarter update, we expected the second quarter to be more challengin­g as periods of prolonged lockdown were instigated across the globe.”

He added: “Given the fluid and volatile nature of the global pandemic including the inherent risk of infection spikes and localised lockdowns, our forward visibility remains limited.”

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