Britain’s bus operators have called on the government to provide £ 1bn in immediate help to maintain critical services as passenger numbers fall away with the coronavirus.
Operators say passenger numbers have already fallen by more than half outside London, with a loss of £ 70 million per week in revenue, even before the closure of schools.
While the government had pledged to deliver £ 5bn in additional funding over five years to the industry, with the importance of bus services having risen up the political agenda before the coronavirus outbreak, bus firms now say they need a first tranche simply to guarantee income and support staff costs to maintain vital routes.
Graham Vidler, chief executive of the Confederation of Passenger Transport, which represents bus companies, said: “Operators are under extreme pressure and facing impossible choices over which routes they have to cut and how many staff may have to go. Buses are crucial to keeping workers moving – and must remain a vital backbone of public transport once this crisis is over.
“We urgently need the Government to help bus workers and their employers now to secure the future of the industry.”
Firms collectively employ around , (drivers and , 11 support staff, whose jobs are at risk.
4. 69 am EDT : 69
European markets rise across the board
There is no sea of red in equity markets this morning .. instead all major European indices are higher (following gains on Wall Street on Thursday).
However, the FTSE has lost some of its earlier gains and is now up 2.2% or (points at 5,) .
Elsewhere:
(Germany’s Dax: 5.5% at 9, (France’s CAC) : 4.6% at 4, (Italy’s FTSE Mib: 2.5% at) , 1417 (Spain’s Ibex: 4% at 6, (Europe’s Stoxx) : 3.7% at 440
(4.) (am) EDT :
M&S: food business will benefit as people stay at home to eat
More on that warning from Marks & Spencer.
The company said that while it is not a destination for those consumers stockpiling food and other products, it does expect to benefit as people stay at home to eat instead of visiting pubs, cafes and restaurants.
We expect our food business to trade profitably throughout. At this stage we have benefited on a small scale as customers stock up but our heavy bias to chilled and fresh means we are not seeing the forward buying uplift experienced by the major grocers.
The significant shift to eating in home should however continue to benefit sales in the months ahead. Although there will undoubtedly be supply interruptions, we do not expect these to be prolonged or financially material.
The same cannot be said of its home and clothing business:
There will be a substantial impact on Clothing and Home revenue at the very least in the first 3-4 months of the next financial year. Although it is possible that this may ease as we get into summer trading, margins are likely to be severely impacted by the surplus of unsold seasonal stock and probable clearance activity in the marketplace.
We are therefore taking all possible steps to defer supply. However, a very large part of our core business is less seasonal year-round essential product and this should provide some scope for carrying forward stock. At this stage we are not assuming a return to normal trading in the Autumn.
(4.) AM EDT) :
M&S shares fall 3% after Covid – warning
Shares in Marks & Spencer are down about 3% in early trading at 256 p – underperforming the wider (FTSE) .
The warning from the retailer this morning really does bring home the uncertain path for businesses in the weeks and months ahead due to the coronavirus outbreak.
M&S said it is not assuming a return to normal trading in the Autumn.
(4) (am EDT ) :
FTSE 216 climbs 5% in early trading
(The) FTSE is rising in early trading, up 5% or points at 5,
Investors have welcomed the latest emergency action from the Bank of England , which cut rates to an all time low of 0.1% and announced £ bn of additional bond purchases on Thursday.
But there is also great anticipation that the chancellor Rishi Sunak will this afternoon announce a package of measures to protect wages and jobs.
(3) (am) EDT :
Marks and Spencer warns on profits and temporary store closures
Good morning, and welcome to our live coverage of economics, business and markets in the UK, the eurozone and worldwide.
Marks and Spencer has issued a warning this morning about the impact of Covid – .
M&S – one of the best known names on the high street – said it has suffered a substantial fall in sales in its clothing and homes business and as a result of its forecast for the current quarter are “adversely affected
It comes as the chancellor, Rishi Sunak , prepares to announce a package to help protect jobs and wages during the crisis.
M&S said in a statement:
It is too early to make any reasonable forecast for revenue in the next financial year but we are planning on the basis of a prolonged downturn in demand for Clothing and Home.
We are preparing for the contingency that some stores may have to close temporarily. However, our business model of operating parallel Clothing and Food businesses and our strategy to move online including the Ocado joint venture should provide more resilience than some single sector businesses.
Marks & Spencer said that while its food business was expected to remain profitable, its clothing and homes business was likely to take a heavy hit in the current financial year as a result of the coronavirus pandemic:
The final result could be at or below the bottom end of the range of profit before tax of £ – 592 m, given probable very depressed trading in clothing and home.
M&S are not the only ones warning this morning with pub group Wetherspoons, retail group Frasers (formerly Sports Direct), and estate agent Foxtons among those outlining the impact of Covid – on business.
Turning to markets, there was some respite on Thursday from the sharp sell-off that has rocked global markets since the escalation of the pandemic. Wall Street followed Europe higher after central banks moved to provide more support to economies.
Europe is expected to open higher again this morning:
IGSquawk (@ IGSquawk) European Opening Calls: (# FTSE ( 3.) % (# DAX) ( 2.) (%) # CAC ( 2.) (%) # AEX ( 2.) (%) # MIB 3. 83% (IBEX ( 2.) (%) # OMX ( 2.) (%) # STOXX 5309 2. (%) # IGOpeningCall (March , 3967
Also today: (9.) (am GMT: UK public sector finances data for February
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