Finance Pros Don't See U.S. Companies Hiring Until 2011
18 December 2009 - 2:41AM
PR Newswire (US)
Access to Credit Emphasizes Strategies to Conserve Cash WASHINGTON,
Dec. 17 /PRNewswire/ -- Significant hiring won't begin at most U.S.
companies until well into 2011, even though the U.S. economy will
continue its modest recovery next year, according to professionals
in the finance departments of U.S. companies. The 2010 Business
Outlook Survey released today by the Association for Financial
Professionals (AFP) and underwritten by Wells Fargo & Company
(NYSE: WFC) shows that while more than a quarter of respondents
indicate that their organizations will shrink their payrolls in
2010, 46 percent expect that their organizations' workforces will
be stable in the new year. When hiring begins, most finance
professionals expect payroll growth to be modest at first. Of
organizations surveyed, 25 percent anticipate returning to
pre-recession staffing levels in 2011; 32 percent expect a rebound
in 2012; and three out of ten do not expect their organizations
ever to return their payrolls to pre-recessionary levels. "AFP
members have played a critical role in maintaining the financial
stability of their organizations through the recession," said Jim
Kaitz, president and CEO of AFP. "As we look ahead, AFP will
continue to work with policymakers to ensure that legislative
initiatives have a positive impact on potential job growth." This
is the sixth year in which AFP has surveyed its members in December
to track their outlook of future business conditions. Financial
professionals are uniquely positioned to assess how business
conditions will affect their organizations in the immediate and
short-term, and they must make critical business decisions -
including those concerning borrowing and investment - based upon
those assessments. Because financial professionals work in a wide
range of industries and in public and private organizations of
varying sizes, AFP's survey results are accurate indicators of
future business conditions. Even if the recession might have ended
by a textbook definition, nearly 90 percent of financial
professionals surveyed believe that the U.S. economy has yet to
enter a period of sustained economic growth. Fifty-one percent do
not see economic growth beginning until the second half of 2010,
and nearly a quarter do not see it happening until at least 2011.
Factors that finance professionals think will affect economic
growth include consumer demand, the growing Federal budget deficit,
rising health care costs and access to credit. Further, respondents
agree that regulatory reforms might moderate future shocks to the
economy, but these reforms also might come at a cost. MORE CUTBACKS
IF CREDIT REMAINS TIGHT In the case of credit, survey respondents
see only minor improvements in access to credit compared with this
time last year. Although fewer organizations (18 percent) than in
previous AFP surveys report that credit had become scarcer during
the past six months, only 16 percent report that it had become more
plentiful. Only a quarter of financial professionals expect their
organizations' access to credit to improve in 2010. If the ability
to obtain credit does not improve by midyear 2010, then 55 percent
of organizations expect to take additional actions to conserve
cash, which might include: -- Reducing capital spending (68
percent) -- Freezing or reducing hiring (62 percent) -- Considering
closing locations/offices (33 percent) -- Reducing current or
planned inventory levels (25 percent) -- Delaying payments to
vendors (23 percent) -- Tightening credit standards for trading
partners (23 percent) -- Drawing on credit facilities that are
still available to build cash (22 percent) Any of these actions
would be on top of the measures that 96 percent of organizations
surveyed had taken since the beginning of the financial crisis in
September 2008. "This has been a challenging time. Yet we are
seeing the markets stabilize, and opportunities are emerging," said
David Trotter, head of Treasury Management sales for Wells Fargo.
"Credit is still top of mind, but looking ahead, financial
professionals have become more efficient and better at controlling
their cash due to the challenging environment." RATE HIKES SEEN IN
2Q 2010 Also looking ahead, 59 percent of financial professionals
anticipate a rise in the Fed funds target rate during the second
half of 2010. Eleven percent of survey respondents believe the
first rate hike will occur sooner - during the first half of 2010 -
while 30 percent anticipate the first rate hike will not occur
until 2011 or later. ABOUT THE SURVEY Between Dec. 1 and Dec. 11,
the AFP surveyed U.S. financial professionals about current and
expected business conditions in the U.S. The survey generated 1,014
responses from professionals holding a variety of positions within
their organizations, including CFO, vice president of finance,
treasurer and assistant treasurer. The results produce a margin of
error of +/- 3.1 percent. The full survey report is available on
http://www.afponline.org/research ABOUT AFP® The Association for
Financial Professionals ( http://www.afponline.org/ ) serves a
network of more than 16,000 treasury and finance professionals.
Headquartered outside Washington, DC, AFP provides members with
news, economic research and data on the evolving world of treasury
and finance, as well as treasury certification programs, networking
events, financial analytical tools, training, and public policy
representation to legislators and regulators. AFP is the daily
resource for treasury and finance professionals. AFP's global reach
extends to over 150,000 treasury and financial professionals
worldwide, including AFP of Canada; London-based gtnews, an on-line
resource for the treasury and finance community; and bobsguide, a
financial IT solutions network. ABOUT WELLS FARGO Wells Fargo &
Company is a diversified financial services company with $1.2
trillion in assets, providing banking, insurance, investments,
mortgage and consumer finance through more than 10,000 stores and
12,000 ATMs and the internet (wellsfargo.com) across North America
and internationally. DATASOURCE: Association for Financial
Professionals CONTACT: Elizabeth Johns, Managing Director, AFP,
+1-301-961-8886, Web Site: http://www.afponline.org/
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