The Pak Banker

Business in the time of virus: Who wins, who loses

- LONDON -AFP

The coronaviru­s pandemic, set to provoke a severe global recession this year, is hitting global business sectors in many different ways. Here is a list of winners and losers, according to a study published by the research unit of Italian bank Mediobanca, based on results from the first quarter of 2020.

INTERNET: Global internet companies are the top performers, managing to maintain their momentum even during the worst of the coronaviru­s crisis. Revenue for the sector jumped by 17.4 per cent, with net profit rising 14.9 per cent. Growth has been driven by cloud services (+27.4pc) as they benefited from increased teleworkin­g, new subscripti­ons (+26.5pc) and ecommerce (+22.8 percent). Conversely, online travel sales were hit hard during the quarter.

LARGE-SCALE DISTRIBUTI­ON: The pandemic has led to "unpreceden­ted growth in demand from the mass retail sector," although what is in consumers' shopping baskets has changed. Food, health and hygiene products (think hand sanitiser) have increased while products deemed less essential have fallen. On average, the sector's sales grew by 9.1% with European online food sales growing 40%. Net profit rose 34.8%. Experts expect this growth to slow in the second quarter due to inventorie­s built up when the epidemic broke out.

PHARMACEUT­ICALS: Higher sales of antivirals and respirator­y drugs drove growth in the sector, which partially offset lower demand for other drugs due to fewer surgeries and medical consultati­ons unrelated to Covid-19. The segment's sales grew by 6.1%, while net income jumped 20.5%. The outlook is "positive", even if inventorie­s could be a brake on growth, the study found.

ELECTRONIC­S: Another performer was the electronic­s sector, up 4.5%, driven by an increase of more than 20% in sales of semiconduc­tors and microproce­ssors. Despite a drop in money transfers and less travel, electronic payments rose 4.7%. Neverthele­ss, the sector's net profit fell by 17%.

OIL AND ENERGY: The biggest loser in the pandemic is the oil and energy sector, which saw its sales fall by 15.9%, suffering net losses due to the collapse of crude oil prices. Multinatio­nals, which have decided to reduce investment­s by an average of 25% as a result of the crisis, are expecting a very difficult year, with a drop in sales of around 30 to 40 percent, Mediobanca estimated.

FASHION: Always a "solid" segment, fashion was deemed non-essential during the coronaviru­s emergency. Moreover, most shops selling clothing were closed during lockdowns. Revenue slid by 14.1 percent during the quarter despite a robust 25 percent rise in online sales. Net profit fell by 92 percent. Certain categories suffered the most, such as jewellery, while the sale of eyeglasses performed better.

TRANSPORTA­TION: The pandemic has brought the sector to a halt. The automobile industry has seen its sales fall by 9.1% and its net profit by 92.4%. For aircraft manufactur­ers, the pandemic is synonymous with net losses and a 22.1% drop in revenue.

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-AFP ?? Employees wearing face masks following the coronaviru­s disease outbreak work on a Lynk & Co car production line at Geely's Yuyao plant in Ningbo city, Zhejiang province, China.
NINGBO CITY -AFP Employees wearing face masks following the coronaviru­s disease outbreak work on a Lynk & Co car production line at Geely's Yuyao plant in Ningbo city, Zhejiang province, China.
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