Euler Hermes: A corporate view on inflation

Deniza Cristian 28/02/2022 | 18:49

With high input prices expected to persist until H2 2022, companies’ cash balances are key to cushioning the blow. Fortunately, these stand more than EUR690bn above pre-crisis levels in the Eurozone and more than USD 765bn in the US. In addition, since 2021, firms have also been increasing capex, mostly in reaction to supply-chain disruptions to avoid missed sales opportunities. This is echoed in the broad increase in inventories. Furthermore, pent-up demand in 2021 helped most firms preserve or even increase their margins. Overall, in the baseline scenario, it is expected that most sectors in both the US and the Eurozone to gain profitability in 2022 compared to 2021, according to Euler Hermes.

 

The increase in sales as estimated by sell-side analysts should allow firms to offset higher wages (+4.7% in the US and +2.5% in the Eurozone), higher interest rates (+75bps in the US and +25bps in the Eurozone) and higher oil prices – it is expected an average Brent price of USD81 in 2022. In particular, there’s strong profitability gains for the US construction and machinery & equipment sectors, and for the Eurozone household equipment industry. The Eurozone metals sectors, which performed very strongly in 2021, is expected to lose some profitability in 2022, mostly because of its higher energy bill. 

“In the case of Romania, among the sectors most affected by the increase in short-term energy costs we find transport, construction, but also agriculture. In the case of metals, increases in energy costs have so far been easily transferred to final costs due to a sustained contribution on the construction side (mainly in the residential segment), but also due to increased costs on the logistics side. For the same reasons, but with a lower intensity, the consumer goods, IT and electronics sectors also transferred rising costs to final prices, being supported by stable consumption. The way the latter will evolve under the pressure of higher interest rates will determine the degree of impact of inflation on the profitability of most sectors.”, said Mihai Chipirliu, CFA, Risk Director Euler Hermes Romania. 

And while a year-end survey showed that a majority of firms are planning to raise prices, only a handful really have the ability to pass on higher input prices  – notably oil, air transport and textiles, as well as some sub-sectors of food manufacturing. In addition, some industries could face the prospect of risking increasing prices even as demand is waning. 

Strong cash balances, as well as rising profitability and capex, are cushioning most US and Eurozone companies from high input prices – for now. In 2021, input prices outpaced retail prices in most sectors, the result of supply-chain disruptions, the strong rebound in demand, constraints on the commodity supply and the rise of safety restocking. However, only about 40% of sectors on both sides of the Atlantic had retail prices rising faster than wholesale prices. Over the long-term, 53% of Eurozone sectors (including automotive, sporting goods, pharmaceuticals) have seen retail prices grow faster than their wholesale prices against 25% for the US. 

Which sectors are at risk of rising interest rates?  

With inflation set to remain above 2% until 2023, it is expected for central banks to gradually raise interest rates, which will increase financing costs for corporates. They do have the leeway to withstand a moderate monetary policy tightening cycle, though: Previous cycles have shown that the sensitivity of +100bp increase in key interest rates is highest in the US, the UK and Italy, and 90% of the pass-through materializes after four months, with the full pass-through achieved after seven months. However, the transmission from higher interest rates to the real economy can be slower this time, thanks to corporates’ high cash positions (+27% compared to 2019). As a result, it is estimated that an increase of +100bp in key interest rates would translate into a fall in non-financial corporates’ margins of -1pp in Germany, -2.3pp in France, -1.5pp in the UK and -1.4pp in the US. 

Nevertheless, three scenarios could threaten corporate resilience: 1) A surge in oil and gas prices as a consequence of rising geopolitical tensions between Russia, Ukraine and NATO; 2) cumulative one-year wage growth reaching +10% and 3) interest rates increasing by +200bp. 

“The latest geo-political events related to the intervention of the Russian army in Ukraine confirm the inclusion in the first scenario. The price of a barrel of oil exceeds $ 100 for the first time since the previous aggression in the neighboring country, and the sharp rise in gas prices, along with that of the barrel, indicates the maintenance of pressure on energy prices and, implicitly, inflation.”, said Mihai Chipirliu, CFA, Risk Director Euler Hermes Romania.

A commodity price shock would put the power and metals sectors most at risk: it is estimated that oil prices rising to USD100/bbl would cut margins by more than -2pp for the power sector. Looking at the breakdown of costs for selected industries, the energy bill is mostly an issue for the power sector. In addition, food manufacturing, metals and automotive have a heavy commodity bill through their demand for metal products/commodities. Interestingly, the retail sector is the most reliant on logistics costs, while the oil & gas sector is spending a sizeable amount on services. When simulating a shock on commodity prices on the balance sheets of over 1600 firms based in the Eurozone and in the US, Euler Hermes has found that the power and metals sectors in both regions are most at risk of a drop in profitability. 

What if inflationary pressures lead to higher wages?  

The transport sector in the Eurozone and the US, software & IT in the Eurozone and electronics in the US are on the front line in case of a wage shock. Accelerating wage growth is likely to push up corporate cost bases in 2022: it is expected strong wage growth of +4.7% in the US, +2.5% in France and +2.6% in Germany, though there is limited further upside pressures going forward as price acceleration will slow down in H2 2022 and productivity gains have remained contained, mainly in the Eurozone. 

While it is expected for inflation to recede by 2022 as pandemic-related disruptions ease, sustained rising prices could put the UK and France most at risk of a wage-price loop materializing in end 2022 and 2023. Firms’ wage bills are slightly higher in the Eurozone’s industrial sectors than in the US, with the sectors spending most on personnel being pharmaceuticals, computers, textiles and electrical equipment. In case of a 10% wage increase, the transport sector, both in the US and the Eurozone, would take a severe profitability hit. Software & IT services in the Eurozone is also vulnerable. In the US, the second most vulnerable sector is electronics.  

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Deniza Cristian | 12/04/2024 | 17:28
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