Brexit Fears and Weak Pound Weigh on Corporate Europe
20 Juli 2016 - 3:36PM
Dow Jones News
By Robert Wall
LONDON--The fallout from last month's Brexit vote is starting to
pile up for Europe Inc.
On Wednesday, European budget carrier Wizz Air Holdings PLC said
it would cut the number of seats it planned to add to routes to and
from the U.K. because of the lower pound. Appliance maker
Electrolux AB and Groupe Eurotunnel SA both said the weaker pound
would hit earnings.
Uncertainty over how Britain will disentangle itself from the
European Union is clouding corporate forecasts. But the sharp drop
in the pound after last month's Brexit vote is already having
short-term effects across the continent.
Many companies stand to gain from the falling pound. Investors
have bid up shares of several big, British-listed firms that earn
most of their revenue outside the U.K., like drinks maker Diageo
PLC and pharmaceuticals giant GlaxoSmithKline PLC.
But for many European firms dependent on the U.K. for revenue,
the falling pound is turning into a headache. The British currency
fell to a 31-year-low against the dollar after the June 23
referendum. On Wednesday, sterling was still more than 8% lower
against the euro and down more than 11% against the dollar.
Wizz Air, based in Budapest, Hungary, said it would cut
capacity-growth plans on U.K. routes because of the currency rout.
The fast-growing carrier, one of Europe's lowest-priced airlines,
said it would add just 15% more seats for the U.K. market during
the winter season, instead of the planned 30% increase. Chief
Executive József Váradi said the decision was currency related, and
wasn't based on worry that passengers would stop traveling to and
from Britain.
The airline takes in a chunk of revenue for U.K. inbound and
outbound flights in pounds. It said it would shift plans to add
seats on routes previously earmarked to serve the U.K. to other
locations.
Jonas Samuelson, chief executive of Swedish household-appliance
maker Electrolux AB, told analysts the British construction
industry was more cautious after Brexit and that is expected to
affect demand for Electrolux products.
"Our biggest job is to compensate for the currency impact," he
said after the company reported earnings for the second quarter
ended June 30. Electrolux said it is bracing for a tougher third
quarter, when the effect of the weaker pound will stretch out over
three months and as currency hedges it has in place unwind.
Groupe Eurotunnel SA, operator of the Channel Tunnel that links
Britain with France, said that weakness in the pound knocked
earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization, by 2%
in the first half. Stripping out the impact of foreign exchange,
earnings would have risen 4%, the company said.
Matthias Verbergt
in Stockholm; William Horobin and
Thomas Varela
in Paris contributed to this article.
Write to Robert Wall at robert.wall@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 20, 2016 09:21 ET (13:21 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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