UPDATE: Adecco Swings To 2Q Loss, Bids For UK Spring Group
11 Agosto 2009 - 11:47AM
Dow Jones News
Switzerland's Adecco SA (ADEN.VX), the world's largest
recruitment firm by sales, Tuesday warned that the staffing market
will continue to be challenging in the months ahead as it reported
a second quarter net loss on sliding sales and goodwill impairments
on recent acquisitions.
The company, which competes with the likes of Manpower Inc.
(MAN) of the U.S. and Netherlands-based Randstad Holding NV
(RAND.AE), said it believes it is well-placed to take advantage of
the market recovery, when it happens, after streamlining its
business during the downturn by cutting costs and jobs. It signaled
its confidence by making a GBP108 million recommended bid for
U.K.-based Spring Group PLC (SRG.LN.), a general recruitment
company operating across the world, and said it was looking at more
acquisitions.
"We expect business conditions to remain demanding," Chief
Executive Patrick De Maeseneire said. "We were able to take out
costs during the second quarter and pressure on the decline rates
has eased over the course of the second quarter. But we really have
to wait until September, after the summer break, to have a better
view how the market develops."
The Zurich-based company reported a net loss for the three
months to the end of June of EUR147 million, compared with the
EUR212 million profit it made a year earlier when it was boosted by
a tax gain. The result was well below analysts' forecasts for a net
profit of EUR30 million as the company took a EUR125 million
goodwill impairment charge on recent acquisitions such as DIS and
Tuja in Germany.
Sales fell 31% to EUR3.59 billion, from EUR5.20 billion, as
business in France, its biggest single market making up about 30%
of revenue, continued to decline and demand for temporary
employment services remained weak in the U.S., Germany and
Japan.
Still, Adecco managed to boost its operating margin to 2.4%,
from 2.1% in the first quarter, as it slashed costs to EUR2.95
billion, from EUR4.20 billion in the year-earlier period.
Adecco, like its rivals, has been hit hard by the economic
downturn as businesses across the world have cut permanent and
temporary jobs and unemployment is expected to rise further in both
the U.S. and Europe in the months ahead.
Analysts expressed disappointment with Adecco's results and at
0808 GMT, the stock was down CHF0.85, or 1.6%, at CHF52,
underperforming a rise in the broader Swiss market. The shares have
risen more than 50% so far in 2009 amid hopes that the economy will
improve faster than expected.
Bank Vontobel analyst Michael Foeth, who rates the stock at
hold, commended Adecco's cost cutting efforts, describing them as
remarkable in the current environment.
Company Web Site:http://www.adecco.com
-By Goran Mijuk, Dow Jones Newswires, +41 43 443 80 47;
goran.mijuk@dowjones.com