After several quarters of putting on a brave face when questioned about
the increasingly troubled economy, many companies have finally relented and are
using the dreaded “R” word: recession.
A chief executive talking about recession is hardly the canary in the coal
mine—executives are typically the last to acknowledge that the economy is
performing poorly—but it is probably one of the biggest indicators that a
recession is coming or even already under way.
Indeed, the prevalence of recession talk in quarterly filings and earnings
conference calls last week show that companies are trying to dampen earnings
expectations for the next quarter and through early 2009. By then, recession may
become a leading risk factor in company filings, as it is in some already.
“When there gets to be a consensus all around that there is a recession,
there is less concern about using that word,” said Barbara Franklin, former U.S.
commerce secretary and member of the boards of Aetna and Dow Chemical Co. “I’m
not sure if we’re there now… [but] I think any prudent company at this point is
going to be conservative about everything.”
Some execs still are couching their comments carefully. Caterpillar CEO Jim
Owens said in a recent earnings call that the U.S. and European markets were “in
very poor economic health and have in fact experienced recessionary conditions.”
A worldwide recession is a “worst-case scenario,” he added.
Meanwhile, René Jones, chief financial officer at M&T Bank, recently told
analysts that “we’re likely to move our way into a recession,” although he
predicted that the company would continue to perform strongly in certain
regional markets.
As far as McClatchy Co. chief executive Gary Pruitt and Netflix CEO Reed
Hastings are concerned, a recession is already here. Both spoke of a recession
in the present tense during their earnings calls last week, and both said their
companies’ growth would slow considerably in the fourth quarter compared with
the fourth quarter of last year.
“It will be difficult to maintain margins for sure, but we would expect that
we will get through this recession,” Pruitt said, adding that “we would expect
to see some recovery in margins as the economy strengthens.”
Talk of recession is far from universal. Some companies don’t want to come
off as too conservative in their approach, especially if they are outperforming
peers, said Mark Ellis, CFO of gift and jewelry retailer Michael C. Fina.
“We’re all peering out there and can’t exactly see the road ahead right now,”
he said.
Other companies don’t seem to be concerned about a recession even if one
seems imminent. Investment management firm BlackRock laid out a somewhat
positive outlook. CEO Larry Fink said that “much of the hostile times in terms
of insolvency are behind us” and predicted that interbank lending will start to
pick up soon, thereby unlocking credit markets. However, he said those upbeat
developments would occur “despite a recession that we are going to be facing.”
Philip Morris CFO Hermann Waldemer told investors last week that “no business
in the world is actually recession-proof, but I am convinced that our business
is very recession-resilient. There is no replacement product to cigarettes, and
our smokers are very loyal to our brand.”
At least one major company is already citing a recession as one of its
leading risks. Among the primary risk factors cited in Halliburton’s most recent
10-Q is a “possible worldwide recession” that would reduce demand for energy and
cause oil and natural gas prices to plummet, thus hurting the company’s ability
to meet earnings expectations.
Other quarterly filings have so far steered clear of using the “R” word, but
have deployed such terms as “economic downturn” and “credit tightening” to
explain potential losses.
If economic conditions worsen, as many economists expect, many companies may
enter what Yahoo CFO Blake Jorgenson termed “recession mode” in an interview
last week with the Associated Press.
Recession mode can involve different tactics in different industries. Cerner
Corp. general manager Mike Valentine told investors during the company’s
earnings call last week that a “sustained recession and credit crunch could
start to impact our clients’ ability to invest in [information technology].”
Which is why Cerner will widen the range of the risks it could face during its
guidance next quarter, he said.
Filed by Nicholas Rummell of Financial Week, a sister publication of
Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.
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