Computer services and software has been branded the FTSE’s worst performing
sector of 2007 after 43 firms issued profit warnings.
The category saw a total of 56 warnings last year, putting it joint bottom with
the support services sector.
Despite the warnings almost half of which were attributed to delayed contracts
or negotiations Ernst & Young said it had been a good year for software
and services stocks.
John Hughman, senior technology analyst at
Ernst
& Young, emphasised that all but one of the warnings were from companies
with less than £200m turnover, with larger firms’ performance unaffected by the
credit crunch.
“While software and services shares have been knocked since November, the credit
crunch has not had a huge impact on corporate profit and loss,” he said.
“There are a lot of companies in the sector and many of them are small so they
are exposed to fewer contracts and customers. Despite the problems in the wider
economy, there were no warnings in the past quarter among larger firms.”
Ray Ottey, partner manager of security at Alternative Investment Market-listed
VAR
Netstore,
said the market had picked up due to soaring demand for consolidation,
compliance and data leakage projects.
“A lot of people are performing generic computer services and are typically
involved in refresh, which firms are not focusing on,” he said. “If companies
have consolidation and virtualisation skills, they would not have seen any
impact.”
Scott Fletcher, chief executive of plus-listed reseller
ANS,
said: “The industry is in reasonably good shape and the credit crunch has not
particularly affected us.”
Hughman cautioned that the impact of the credit crunch may yet trickle through
to affect tech stocks in 2008, due to their high exposure to the financial
services, retail and manufacturing sectors.
AIM
firms hit in sub-prime chaos




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