Oman Daily Observer

Finance chiefs optimistic about business growth

- ANDY JALIL andyjalil@aol.com The writer is our foreign correspond­ent based in the UK

Financial services bosses are confident about their second-quarter results, according to a survey of more than 150 senior executives, despite the squeeze from inflationa­ry pressures forcing them to cut costs.

An opinion poll commission­ed by KPMG found 88 per cent of leaders were “confident” about overall business growth for the period between April and June, ticking up one per cent from its previous survey in January.

A total of 87 per cent had a positive outlook on profitabil­ity, a four percentage point boost from January.

Optimism among bankers rose five percentage points to 94 per cent, while confidence among asset and wealth managers fell to 83 per cent from 89 per cent.

Meanwhile 79 per cent of insurance executives were confident on the next quarter.

Financial services firms continue to feel squeezed by interest rates being at a 16-year high and inflationa­ry pressures that have pushed up operationa­l costs forcing them to make costcuttin­g plans.

Nearly 40 per cent of leaders named cost pressures as the biggest challenge facing their business in the coming quarter, followed by inflationa­ry pressures and borrowing costs.

More than a third of leaders planned to reduce costs through reviewing suppliers (37 per cent) and generative AI (35 per cent).

Nearly a quarter (23 per cent) planned to make savings by cutting jobs and reigning in hiring, altering their real estate footprints and reviewing staff pay.

Global and UK head of financial services at KPMG, Karim Haji, said: “While financial services leaders are keeping an optimistic outlook, they do so with caution as costs are still a concern, and the sector continues to eye up savings in response to economic pressures.”

There is, however, some concern as manufactur­ers are facing the prospect of two years of “anaemic growth”, research suggests.

Make UK said latest forecasts indicate the sector will remain “flat” this year and grow by just half the rate of the economy in 2025.

Its survey of more than 300 companies also found orders are “consistent but subdued” while recruitmen­t and investment plans are fairly strong.

Firms in electronic­s, aerospace and food and drink are more optimistic, while the South East and Wales are said to be performing substantia­lly better than other regions.

According to Make Up, these are becoming permanent, with the strong performanc­e of manufactur­ing in the South East yet further evidence that levelling up is “failing to address” regional economic imbalance.

Senior economist at Make UP, Fhaheen Khan, said: “While manufactur­ers’ own confidence remains robust, the overall prospects for the sector are weak for the foreseeabl­e future.

“While there are clearly external factors at play, the UK economy has a fundamenta­l growth problem which a business-as-usual policy process simply will not address.

The next government of whatever colour must address this fundamenta­l problem as a matter of national urgency, beginning with a long-term industrial strategy which will really shift the dial on the UK economic performanc­e.”

Head of manufactur­ing at BDO, which helped with the report, Richard Austin, added: “Manufactur­ers have continued to show their ability to overcome wave after wave of challenges, but they cannot continue to do this indefinite­ly without some more long-term support from the Government.

“We have reached a tipping point where the ramificati­ons of regional disparity may permanentl­y affect the manufactur­ing sector, which could hamper future growth.”

The end of 2023 was marked by a downturn, with UK manufactur­ing falling into a deeper contractio­n.

Director at S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce, Rob Dobson, said: “UK manufactur­ing output contracted at an increased rate at the end of 2023.

“The demand backdrop remains frosty, with new orders sinking further as conditions remain tough in both the domestic market and in key export markets, notably the EU,” he added.

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