US Companies Expect Economic Improvement, But Ready for Downturn
Location: Stamford
Author: Joan
Weber
Date: Monday, February 6, 2012
When it comes to the business environment in 2012, large U.S. companies
are hoping for the best but feel prepared for the worst.
In a November, Greenwich Associates asked 114 U.S. companies with annual
sales of at least $500 million about their expectations for the 2012
business and economic environment, strategic steps they are taking to
prepare for the year ahead and their assessments of various government
economic policies.
Among the key findings of the research:
· Forty-seven percent of
participating companies have a positive view of the business environment
over the next six to 12 months, while roughly one in five has negative
expectations for the business environment.
· Nearly three-quarters of
large U.S. companies rate themselves as prepared to handle economic
risks such as a double-dip recession or inflation and 96% believe they
are prepared to deal with financial risks such as another credit crunch.
· Despite confidence in their
level of preparedness, companies express high levels of concern over a
series of looming risks. Ranked at the top of that list of concerns is
the impact of government regulations.
· Large U.S. companies view
long-term federal deficit reduction as a top priority that should take
precedence over efforts to stimulate the economy and fend off recession.
Improved Credit Conditions
A primary reason for company’s confidence in their preparation for the
year ahead is the improved credit market conditions in which large U.S.
companies have been operating for the past year. Nearly 80% of the large
U.S. companies participating in the Greenwich Associates 2011 U.S. Large
Corporate Banking
Study report having absolutely no difficulty obtaining bank
credit. Seventy percent of large U.S. companies say they have absolutely
no trouble funding in commercial paper markets, up from 63% last year
and 47% in 2009. The results are even more positive and impressive in
debt capital markets, in which 81% of large companies say they have no
problem raising funds, up from 67% in 2010 and just 38% in 2009.
Reflecting this favorable environment, large U.S. companies last year
maintained the share of their overall available credit currently
outstanding at a comfortable 16-17%. “Most of the companies
participating in the November study report no change to these favorable
funding conditions over the past three to six months,” says Greenwich
Associates consultant Don Raftery.

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