A faltering jobs market and added uncertainty from the general election took a toll on City recruitment giant Hays, it revealed today.
The £1.4 billion firm revealed that fees fell by almost a fifth in the quarter to the end of June. Hiring for permanent positions fell the most – by 22% – with temporary posts down 14%. Overall group fees fell by 17%.
That came as “activity levels in the public and private sector slowed through the quarter, both impacted in June by the UK election”, it said, with “longer-than-normal ‘time-to-hire’” rates and “low levels of client and candidate confidence”.
Dirk Hahn, its chief executive, added: “Given ongoing global uncertainties, in the near-term we expect our key markets will remain challenging”.
The company also pointed to the “negative effects” of the French election and “challenging conditions in Germany and Australia,” adding:
“In the UK and Ireland and France we expect a subdued summer, and it is too early to determine when we will see a meaningful recovery. The rest of Europe, the Middle East and Africa remains broadly stable overall.”
In the UK on a sector level, Accountancy & Finance and Construction & Property decreased by 20% and 15% respectively. Technology decreased by 35%, although Engineering fees were more resilient, up 9%.
Hays made annualised cost savings of around £60 million during the full year. Group consultant headcount decreased by 5% in the quarter and by 18% year-on-year.
Its shares rose 1p to 91p.
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