The Deloitte CFO Survey 2014 Q2 results - Policy change is biggest concern for CFOs
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Transcript of The Deloitte CFO Survey 2014 Q2 results - Policy change is biggest concern for CFOs
Political risk has eclipsed worries about the economy as a concern for the Chief Financial Officers of the UK’s largest companies. CFOs rank next May’s general election and the possibility of a referendum on EU membership as greater risks for their businesses than higher interest rates, bubbles in housing or financial markets, or weakness in emerging markets or the euro area. Such views contrast with CFO beliefs that levels of economic and financial risk have fallen sharply in the last year and with lower readings on news-based measures of policy uncertainty. CFOs are increasingly shifting away from a focus on balance-sheet repair towards growth.
Growth is the top balance-sheet priority for UK corporates and 65% of CFOs say now is a good time to take risk. Expectations for capital spending, hiring and discretionary spending have risen strongly in the last year.
The weight CFOs attach to defensive strategies, including cost control, fell to a four-year low in the second quarter.
This sort of positive sentiment is increasingly being reflected in the official data. Hiring by the private sector has risen by 3.2% in the last year and business investment has risen by 10.6%. In May corporate bank borrowing saw the first year-on-year increase in five years.
Q2 2014
Political risk and corporate expansion
The Deloitte CFO Survey
July 2014
Chart 1. Risk to business posed by the following factorsWeighted average ratings on a scale of 0 – 100 where 0 stands for no risk and 100 stands for the highest possible risk
Scotland's referedum on independence on 18th September
A bubble in housing and/or other real and financial assets and the risk of higher inflation
Deflation and economic weakness in the euro area, and the possibility of a renewed euro crisis
Weakness and or volatility in emerging markets
The prospect of higher interest rates and a general tightening of monetary conditions in the UK and US
A future UK referendum on membership of the European Union
The May 2015 UK general election and the risk of policy change and uncertainty
55
50
46
45
44
39
38
The Deloitte CFO Survey
The message from the CFO Survey is that corporates are prioritising expansion over further strengthening of their balance sheets. Against a backdrop of easy credit and high risk appetite companies are upbeat on revenues and margins. Economic and financial risk has declined significantly in the last year. But with the general election less than a year away uncertainties around policy risk have moved centre stage.
AuthorsIan StewartChief Economist020 7007 [email protected]
Debapratim DeSenior Economic Analyst020 7303 [email protected]
Alex ColeEconomic Analyst020 7007 [email protected]
Contacts
Ian StewartChief Economist020 7007 [email protected]
Mark FitzPatrickVice Chairman and CFO Programme Leader020 7303 [email protected]
To access current and past copies of the survey, historical data and media coverage, please visit:
www.deloitte.co.uk/cfosurvey
The Deloitte CFO Survey
CFO perceptions of economic uncertainty have continued to fall.
49% of CFOs now rate the level of financial and economic uncertainty facing their business as above normal, high or very high – the lowest reading in four years.
Chart 2. Uncertainty% of CFOs who rate the level of external financial and economic uncertainty facing their business as above normal, high or very high
45%
55%
65%
75%
85%
95%
2014Q2
2014Q1
2013Q4
2013Q3
2013Q2
2013Q1
2012Q4
2012Q3
2012Q2
2012Q1
2011Q4
2011Q3
2011Q2
2011Q1
2010Q4
2010Q3
Declining uncertainty
This fits with the dramatic fall in uncertainty over economic policy during the last two years, as measured by this news-based index of uncertainty.
Chart 3. Economic policy uncertaintyNews-based index of economic policy uncertainty
Source: Policyuncertainty.com
The Economic Policy Uncertainty index, developed by academics at Stanford University and the University of Chicago, measures the share of articles containing terms related to economic policy uncertainty in the overall UK newsflow
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1997 1998 1999 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Declining uncertainty
Fears of a euro break-up have also subsided. CFOs now assign a 7% probability to the euro area breaking up in the next 12 months – the lowest reading since the euro crisis began in 2011.
Chart 4. Average probability of euro secessionProbability assigned by UK CFOs to the likelihood of any of the existing members of the euro area not being in the single currency in the next 12 months
37%
26%
36%
27%
22%
18%
9% 8%10% 9%
7%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
2014Q2
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Declining uncertainty
The decline in economic and financial uncertainty has coincided with a surge in corporate appetite for risk.
65% of CFOs say that now is a good time to take risk, down only slightly from the record reading of 71% in the first quarter.
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
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80%
2014Q1
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2013Q1
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Chart 5. Risk appetite% of CFOs who think this is a good time to taker greater risk onto their balance sheets
Profitability to rise
Corporates are also more optimistic about their profitability.
CFO expectations of a rise in revenues and operating margins have hit four-year highs.
-100%
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0%
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100%
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Dec
reas
eIn
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Revenues
Chart 6. Outlook for corporate revenues and marginsNet % of CFOs who expect UK corporates’ revenues and margins to increase over the next 12 months
Operating margins
Profitability to rise
-70%
-50%
-30%
-10%
10%
30%
50%
70%
2014Q2
2013Q3
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Less
opt
imis
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Mor
e op
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isti
c
Chart 7. Business confidenceNet % of CFOs who are more optimistic about financial prospects for their company now than three months ago
CFO optimism has eased slightly in the second quarter but continues to run well above its long-term average.
Profitability to rise
-100%
-80%
-60%
-40%
-20%
0%
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Cre
dit
is c
heap
Cre
dit
is c
ostl
yC
redit is hard to get
Cred
it is available
-100%
-80%
-60%
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-20%
0%
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100%
Cost of credit (LHS)
Chart 8. Cost and availability of creditNet % of CFOs reporting credit is costly and credit is easily available
Availability of credit(RHS)
Financing conditions remain benign for the large corporates on our survey panel.
CFOs report that the cost of credit has fallen to a seven-year low in the second quarter while credit availability is close to the highest level in seven years.
Easy credit
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
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Fina
ncia
l defi
cit
Fina
ncia
l sur
plus
Chart 9. Financial balance of corporate sectorFinancial balance of UK private non-financial corporations as a % of GDP
1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014
In the aftermath of the financial crisis, corporates paid down debt, cut costs and held on to cash, realising a huge financial surplus.
Reflecting greater confidence on the strength of their balance sheets, corporates have narrowed this surplus during the last two years.
Easy credit
Bank lending to corporates rose by 1% in the year to May, the first increase in five years.
The Bank of England’s Credit Conditions Survey reveals that mergers and acquisitions, investment into commercial real estate and capital expenditure have been major drivers of corporate demand for loans.
-70%
-50%
-30%
-10%
10%
30%
2014 Q2
2013 Q3
2012 Q4
2012 Q1
2011 Q2
2010 Q3
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2009 Q1
2008 Q2
2007 Q3
Capitalexpenditure
Commercialreal estate
Source: Bank of England’s Credit Conditions Survey
M&A
Chart 10. Factors supporting demand for loans from corporatesNet % of banks reporting each of the following factors as a contributor to changes in corporate demand for lending overthe past three months (2Q moving average)
Easy credit
The top priority for UK CFOs is introducing new products and services or expanding into new markets.
Compared to a year ago, there has been a marked softening of their focus on defensive strategies such as reducing costs and increasing cash flow.
CFOs are placing greater emphasis on expansionary strategies such as increasing capital expenditure and expanding by acquisition.
0% 10% 20% 30% 40%
Reducing leverage
Raising dividends or sharebuybacks
Disposing of assets
Increasing capitalexpenditure
Expanding by acquisition
Increasing cash flow
Reducing costs
Introducing new products/services or expanding into
new markets
2014 Q2
Chart 11. Corporate priorities in the next 12 months% of CFOs who rated each of the following as a strong priority for their business in the next 12 months
2013 Q2
34%
34%
26%40%
25%
15%14%
5%10%
18%
9%
8%12%
13%
21%
38%
26%
Focus on expansion
Corporate defensiveness hit a four-year low in the second quarter of 2014.
CFOs have rated expansioary balance-sheet strategies as a higher priority than defensive ones for the fourth consecutive quarter.
19%
21%
23%
25%27%
29%
31%
33%
35%37%
39%
2014 Q1
2013 Q3
2013 Q1
2012 Q3
2012 Q1
2011 Q3
2011 Q1
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Defensive strategies
Chart 12. CFO priorities: Expansionary vs. defensive strategies
Arithmetic average of the % of CFOs who rated expansionary anddefensive strategies as a strong priority for their business in the next 12 months.
Expansionary strategies are introducing new products/services or expanding into new markets, expanding by acquisition andincreasing capital expenditure.
Defensive strategies are reducing costs, reducing leverage andincreasing cash flow.
Expansionary strategies
Focus on expansion
CFO expectations for growth in discretionary spending have hit a four-year high.
Expectations for growth in hiring and capital expenditure are close to their highest levels in four years.
-100%
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Capitalexpenditure
Chart 13. Outlook for hiring, capital expenditure and discretionary spendingNet % of CFOs who expect UK corporates’ hiring, capital expenditure and discretionary spending to increase over the next12 months
Hiring
Discretionaryspending
Investment on the rise
Official data shows that investment is outpacing GDP growth. Business investment has risen by 10.6% over the last year.
-25
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-15
-10
-5
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Business investment
Chart 14. GDP growth and business investmentUK GDP growth (% YoY) and growth in business investment (% YoY, 2Q moving average)
GDP
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Investment on the rise
In his Mansion House speech on 12th June, the Governor of the Bank of England warned that UK interest rates could rise sooner than widely expected.
CFOs have taken this message on board. On average our panel sees base rates rising to around the 0.9% mark in a year’s time, amounting to roughly two 25-basis-point rises by June 2015.
0%
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1.25%1%0.75%0.50%
43%45%
20%
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20%
36%
9%
1%
6%
Chart 15. Bank rate expectations% of CFOs who expect the Bank of England’s base rate to be at the following levels in a year’s time
2014 Q1 2014 Q12
Investment on the rise
The macroeconomic backdrop to the Deloitte CFO Survey Q2 2014Global equity markets rose 4.2% in the second quarter and yields on US and German bonds fell. Growth forecasts for emerging economies edged lower on a mix of geopolitical, financial and economic concerns. The US economy shrank in the first quarter, although the effects of an unusually harsh winter and business inventory restocking appear to be temporary. Portugal exited its bailout programme and Greece successfully
raised money in the markets but concerns about deflation and low growth prompted the European Central Bank to cut interest rates. In the UK, inflation softened and output rose by 3.1% in the year to Q1 2014, the strongest performance in the developed world. In his Mansion House speech the Governor of the Bank of England claimed that a rise in UK interest rates could “happen sooner than markets currently expect”, although Mr. Carney subsequently sought to play down expectations of an early rate rise.
CFO Survey: Economic and financial context
Quarter-on-quartergrowth
Year-on-yeargrowth
201520142013201220112010200920082007-8
-6
-4
-2
0
2
4
6
Forecasts
UK GDP growth: Actual and forecast (%)
Source: ONS, consensus forecasts from The Economist and Deloitte calculations
UK forecast to growby 3% in 2014
CFO Survey: Economic and financial context
CFO Survey: Economic and financial context
Financial stress on this measure at 7-year low
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Gre
ater
fina
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l str
ess
VIX Index – a measure of equity market volatility
Source: Thomson Reuters Datastream
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Strong private-sector hiring
Public sector
UK private and public sector job growth (thousands)
Source: ONS
Private sector
-300
-200
-100
0
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Q42013
Q12013
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-300
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CFO Survey: Economic and financial context
Inflation at four-year low
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UK annual CPI inflation (%)
Source: ONS
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CFO Survey: Economic and financial context
Two-chart summary of key survey messages
Uncertainty% of CFOs who rate the level of external financial and economic uncertainty facing their business as above normal,high or very high
45%
55%
65%
75%
85%
95%
2014Q2
2013Q3
2012Q4
2012Q1
2011Q2
2010Q3
-100%
-80%
-60%
-40%
-20%
0%
20%
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80%
100%
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Dec
reas
eIn
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se
Capitalexpenditure
Outlook for hiring, capital expenditure and discretionary spendingNet % of CFOs who expect UK corporates’ hiring, capital expenditure and discretionary spending to increase over thenext 12 months
Hiring
Discretionaryspending
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About the surveyThis is the 28th quarterly survey of Chief Financial Officers and Group Finance Directors of major companies in the UK. The 2014 second quarter survey took place between 6th and 23rd June. 112 CFOs participated, including the CFOs of 31 FTSE 100 and 37 FTSE 250 companies. The rest were CFOs of other UK-listed companies, large private companies and UK subsidiaries of major companies listed overseas. The combined market value of the 68 UK-listed companies surveyed is £473 billion, or approximately 21% of the UK quoted equity market. The Deloitte CFO Survey is the only survey of major corporate users of capital that gauges attitudes to valuations, risk and financing. To join our panel of CFO respondents and for additional copies of this report, please contact Linda Elston on 020 7303 0526 or email [email protected]