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Economic Development

South West listed firms see profit warnings double amid rising costs

A report from EY-Parthenon found the majority of profit warnings in the region came from FTSE aerospace and defence firms

(Image: Shared Content Unit)

The number of profit warnings issued by listed companies in the South West doubled in the second quarter of the year amid rising costs and supply chain issues, a report has found.

In the first six months of 2022, 136 profit warnings were issued by listed companies across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, up from 82 in the first six months of 2021, with a record number of firms citing rising costs as the reason behind the warnings.

The study, from accountancy giant Ernst and Young’s (EY) global strategy consulting arm EY-Parthenon, found six of these warnings came from the South West - up from three in the first quarter.

Despite the increase, the report said the region had bucked the national trend, as the number of warnings issued in the first six months of 2022 overall fell to nine from 11 a year earlier.

Of the warnings issued in the second quarter, 58% of companies cited rising costs as one of the main reasons - up from 43% in the first quarter, while 19% noted labour market issues.

EY said out of the 1,222 º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-listed companies, 70 had issued at least two consecutive warnings in the last twelve months. The firm added that, on average, one-in-five companies delist within a year of their third warning, most due to insolvency.

Lucy Winterborne, a partner within turnaround and restructuring strategy at EY-Parthenon in the South West, said the majority of profit warnings in the region came from FTSE aerospace and defence firms, a key sector for the region.

Ms Winterborne said: “While certain parts of this sector, such as commercial aerospace, should benefit from pent-up consumer spending on travel, rising fuel costs and difficulties employing and retaining staff across the whole air travel ecosystem have disrupted the recovery.