Confidence among small and mid-cap companies reached its highest level since September 2011 in January, according to the latest quarterly QCA/BDO small and mid-cap sentiment index. Companies’ confidence in relation to their own prospects rose to 73.6, up from 70.4 in October, and from 64.1 to 69.3 in relation to the wider economy.
Importantly, for the first time since the QCA/BDO index began, confidence among both businesses and their advisers has reached a tipping point, in that the number feeling optimistic about their near-term prospects has become greater than the number remaining neutral or negative – pointing to a new deep-rooted positive sentiment.
Reinforcing their confidence, the majority of small and mid-caps expect to increase their turnover and headcount over the next 12 months and anticipate mean revenue growth of 14.4 percent and mean headcount growth of 6.6 percent.
This quarter’s results show that 57 percent of companies increased their number of full-time employees and 62 percent of companies increased their turnover in 2013, with their mean expected headcount growth at 6.3 percent and their mean expected turnover growth at 8.9 percent. This was in line with the predictions that companies made last year, showing how precise companies are in their projections for revenue and employment.
Tim Ward, Chief Executive of the Quoted Companies Alliance, says last year companies forecast growth and employment with a welcome degree of accuracy: “This is a good sign for 2014. Businesses feel in control of their own destiny and are less in thrall to external factors such as excessive red tape or slowing international growth.”
Small and mid-caps’ access to finance also improved in January, as the ease with which businesses can obtain funding from public equity markets increased to a record high. 53 percent of businesses cite public equity as their preferred method of raising capital, with bank finance being the second most favoured option (35 percent).
“Access to finance is improving and competition for investment is likely to remain fierce. There are queues forming outside fund managers’ offices. Businesses need to be realistic as investors will inevitably have to prioritise and allocate funds. We expect companies at the end of the investment queue to continue to be cautious about taking on big new contracts if they can’t see access to adequate working capital,” Tim concludes.