Global CEOs see U-shaped virus recession

Global business leaders are preparing for a drawn-out U-shaped recession due to the impact of coronavirus and many fear their companies won’t survive the pandemic, a survey of thousands of chief executives shows.

The pandemic sweeping the world has killed nearly 180,000 people, routed financial markets and could trigger the worst economic meltdown since the 1930s Great Depression.

Around 60 per cent of chief executives are preparing for a U-shaped recovery – a long period between recession and an upturn – compared with 22 per cent who predict a double-dip recession, according to an April 15-19 poll of 3534 chief executives from 109 countries conducted by YPO, a business leadership network.

The survey found that 11 per cent of chief executives see coronavirus as a risk to the survival of their firm, while a further 40 per cent say the pandemic poses a severe threat.

“We have not seen a crisis like this for over a hundred years, and some household names will not survive,” said Glenn Keys, Executive Chairman of Aspen Medical, a Sydney-based health services firm and YPO member.

Business leaders in the hospitality and restaurant sectors were the most vulnerable with 41 per cent of executives saying their firms were at risk of not surviving, while 30 per cent in aviation and 19 per cent in wholesale and retail sales feared they may go under, the survey found.

There are some beneficiaries, with 10 per cent of sector-specific retail and wholesale leaders as well as heads of production firms in agriculture, factories, mines and utilities reporting a positive impact to their revenue.

However, most chief executives expect things to get worse before they get better.

Almost two-thirds of business leaders forecast a negative impact on earnings to continue for more than a year, while a quarter expect their workforce to be down by more than 20 per cent a year from now.

“Across the globe, the mindset of the business leader is clearly that the world has changed in a very short space of time,” said Scott Mordell, YPO’s chief executive.

“We are in uncharted waters, filled with an unprecedented number of pitfalls, that are challenging some businesses’ very existence.” 

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