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Two measures of corporate health flash red

LONDON (Reuters) ⁤– Two measures of corporate and economic ⁢health were ‌flashing red on Friday as shipping‍ group Maersk reported a‌ fall in ‍global demand for sea containers and⁣ advertising giant WPP said⁤ clients in the U.S. tech sector were slashing their marketing ​spend.

A.P. Moller-Maersk lowered its estimate for global container trade this year as companies‍ reduce inventories and higher interest rates and⁤ recession risks in Europe and‍ the United States drag on global ⁣economic growth.

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The company, one of the⁣ world’s biggest container shippers, said it ‍expects container volumes ​to fall by as much as ⁤4%. It had ⁣previously forecast a ⁢decline of no more than 2.5%.

Maersk⁢ controls about one-sixth of global ⁢container trade, transporting goods ‌for ⁣retailers and consumer ⁢companies such as Walmart, Nike⁣ and Unilever.

WPP, the world’s largest advertising group, ‍warned that U.S. tech clients had ‌pulled back spending in the second quarter,⁢ which Chief​ Executive Mark Read said took the company by surprise.

“Spend will pick up after a ‌period of time, but I think ⁢we are‌ nervous⁣ for the rest of the ⁤year because ⁣we can’t get total clarity on when‌ that’s going ‍to happen,” he told Reuters.

The retreat in spending led WPP ⁣to follow rival ‍Interpublic ‌– which last month also blamed tech clients cutting marketing ⁢budgets – ⁤in lowering its‌ growth forecast for this year, to 1.5-3.0% from ‍3-5%.

That was a stark ​contrast from⁣ February, when WPP, which owns ​the Ogilvy, Grey ‌and GroupM agencies, reckoned ‌clients would spend on marketing through any downturn to prop up sales and justify ⁢price rises.

Analysts said the news reflected caution among companies wrestling with higher borrowing costs ​and consumers tightening‍ their own​ budgets amid a cost of ⁣living crisis.

Marketing spending‍ is often the first ​to get cut when companies are worried about ⁢a strain ​on cash.

WAIT ‍AND SEE

“Corporations are in wait-and-see ⁣mode when it comes to splashing the cash and⁣ handing margin over, at a ​time⁤ when demand is ⁢very tough to profile,” said Sophie Lund-Yates, lead equity ​analyst ‍at Hargreaves Lansdown.

Apple on Thursday warned that its sales ‌would decline for the fourth ‍quarter in a row, ‍although Amazon.com Inc ‍was more upbeat, reporting sales growth ‍and profit that​ beat ‍Wall Street’s expectations.

The signs of economic turbulence will underscore‍ concerns that a ​bounce in China’s economic activity after‍ Beijing lifted its long COVID lockdowns will prove short-lived. Companies had bet that a Chinese rebound would help offset the ​impact from​ slowdowns in the U.S. and European‍ economies.

The scope of stimulus Beijing has offered to revive the economy ‍so far has underwhelmed the market. ⁤

Global firms from consumer ⁢goods ‍giant Unilever to automaker⁣ Nissan and machinery maker Caterpillar have warned ‍of ⁤slowing ⁣earnings there as the​ world’s second-largest economy loses its post-pandemic spring.

Expectations for second-quarter‍ earnings are already low due in part ‌to China’s weakness. Refinitiv I/B/E/S data show⁤ U.S.⁢ and ⁢European companies are expected to report their worst quarterly ​results in years.

The International⁢ Monetary Fund last week said that it expects ⁢global economic growth to slow this year, led by advanced economies even as food prices have come down and the March banking turmoil has been⁣ contained.

It expects the global growth to slow to 3% ‌this‍ year and next, from 3.5% last year.

Echoing​ Maersk,‍ DHL Group, among the ‍world’s biggest shippers, ⁢said on Tuesday it saw drops of 16% and 7.1% respectively in air and ocean freight volumes in the first ⁢half, particularly⁣ on routes between‍ China and its two⁤ biggest trading partners, the United States​ and⁢ Europe.

‌ (Reporting⁢ by Reuters bureaus; Writing by⁤ Josephine Mason; Editing by⁢ Catherine Evans)

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