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Small and Midsized Industrial Manufacturing CFOs Reveal Their Top Concerns of 2010
March 24, 2010 |Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
CHICAGO — Prime Advantage released its Group CFO Survey, revealing the top financial concerns of its member companies’ CFOs in 2010.
Among the many findings is the revelation of widespread optimism about the economy in 2010, which coincides with the latest U.S. Federal Reserve data showing growth in industrial output for the seventh consecutive month, even as the PPI showed energy costs rising in January.
This is the second consecutive year that Prime Advantage has undertaken a survey of its member companies’ CFOs.
Manufacturing Sector Gains Momentum
Responses to several questions in the 2010 survey indicate that optimism has returned to small and midsized manufacturing enterprises in 2010, including the finding that 67% reported feeling more optimistic about the economy compared to 2009, and that 64% were more optimistic about the financial prospects for their own companies. In addition, in ranking their own companies’ financial prospects for 2010 on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being most optimistic, 51% ranked themselves at 7 or greater.
These results are clearly more optimistic than Prime Advantage’s 2009 CFO Survey, in which 55% of CFOs said they were pessimistic about the economy, and 45% said they were pessimistic about the financial prospects for their own companies.
Also, the 2010 Group CFO Survey shows that 64% of respondents believe the manufacturing economy will expand in 2010.
Effects of the Recession
While industrial output has been on a steady climb, there are still signs that the recession and tight credit conditions will continue to impact growth in 2010, as 91% of respondents said their customers and prospects have been affected by the cost or availability of credit.
In another sign of a sluggish recovery, 57% reported that domestic employment in their factories will not return to year-end 2007 levels before 2011 or 2012. However, when asked whether they would hire new staff to meet an increased demand in 2010, 82% responded affirmatively.
Some popular ways of overcoming the recession hangover and improving liquidity are to keep reducing inventory levels (79%), followed by working to improve purchasing and sourcing efficiency (52%), and implementing asset and inventory optimization plans (48%). Although members took a variety of actions in 2009 to face the recession’s challenges, the majority (56%) believe these actions will not reduce their companies’ long-term growth prospects. Yet, 22% believe that cuts in marketing and advertising spending could limit future growth.
In addition, 70% said they would continue to focus on cutting operational costs as their top corporate priority. 55% said their organizations were focusing on developing new products and services in response to changing consumption patterns, while 52% said it was a priority to both respond quickly to future economic changes and to find new markets for products and services in response to the recession.
Uncertainty about customer demand was the top external concern among 61% of respondents, down from 76% in 2009. Concern over price pressures (28%) and federal government policies (19%) were the other two greatest external concerns.
Price pressures from competition and weak consumer demand were the greatest concerns in the latest Duke University/CFO magazine survey. And while the Prime Advantage member CFOs said that the federal government’s agenda and policies were among their top three external concerns, 73% agreed that the actions taken by the Federal Reserve helped the economy.
Internal Company Costs
The CFOs also offered their perspectives on top internal concerns, with 28% saying healthcare costs, 25% saying the ability to forecast results, and 22% saying that maintaining employee morale and productivity were top internal issues for their companies’ leaders.
When asked to forecast changes in 2010, 64% indicated that their companies would keep prices the same this year, with 27% saying they believed prices would increase. And in another sign of optimism, 45% predicted that productivity, in terms of hours worked, would increase in 2010, while 48% predicted corporate earnings would increase, 39% predicted that wages/salaries would increase, and 42% predicted that new product development spending would increase. However, 79% also predicted that healthcare costs would increase in 2010. In addition, 30% are planning to increase both capital spending and marketing/advertising spending in 2010.
“It is clear that small and midsized manufacturers are optimistic about the future,” said Louise O’Sullivan, president, founder and CEO of Prime Advantage. “However, our CFOs also understand that good business planning and the savings realized through our programs are vital to their financial success.”
The Prime Advantage Group CFO Survey was conducted in January 2010 using an online survey platform. Prime Advantage surveyed a cross section of finance executives from its member companies consisting of industrial manufacturing firms from various sectors with annual revenues ranging between $10 million and $10 billion, of which the majority ranges between $20 million and $500 million.
The survey received a 45% response rate from 80 financial executives representing U.S.-based manufacturers in more than 25 different industries, including commercial foodservice, packaging, truck/trailer, material handling, food processing and construction.
Prime Advantage is a buying consortium for industrial manufacturers with more than 600 members and more than 110 endorsed suppliers. For more information, visit www.primeadvantage.com. Also read Almost 40% of Manufacturers Predict Revenue Increase in H'02 2009
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