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Apr30

The Private Company Outlook: Sageworks, ADP discuss recent trends

Privately held companies continue to have strong fundamental performance in general, but hiring by them remains weak, especially considering how much economic activity has occurred since the recession, Sageworks Chairman Brian Hamilton said Tuesday. “There’s no question the economy is perking along, but [the weak hiring] is one thing we can’t get through,” Hamilton said at The Private Company Outlook meeting in New York. [More]

Jan31

Private residential construction company revenues up

Real residential fixed investment, up 15.3 percent in the fourth quarter, was a bright spot in this week’s initial report on fourth-quarter GDP, which surprised economy watchers by contracting 0.1 percent from the third quarter. And the growth in Americans’ spending on housing was consistent with “mild but meaningful” revenue increases among privately held residential construction companies. [More]

Sep27

Economic data consistent with private-company trends

Thursday’s surprise downward revision to second-quarter GDP and the worst durable goods report since the recession were consistent with some of the trends Sageworks, a financial information company, has been seeing recently. Average annual sales growth for private companies has slowed to around 5.5 percent currently from nearly 11 percent in January and more than 8 percent a year earlier, according to the Sageworks Private Company Indicator. [More]

Sep26

Update on the health of private U.S. companies

When the Census Bureau releases the August report on durable goods manufacturing Thursday, it’s a fair bet that privately held companies will have played a key role in the numbers. After all, private U.S. firms account for 54.5 percent of aggregate non-residential fixed investment. But how are privately held companies faring in general in the current environment? [More]

Aug07

The 'Dog Days' for jobs

Friday’s jobs report for July was neither decidedly sunny nor gloomy, even though stocks on Wall Street rallied to three-month highs. U.S. employers added a net 163,000 jobs in July, topping forecasts, but the unemployment rate and the number of total unemployed were essentially flat to June levels, indicating hiring is still experiencing its own version of the “Dog Days” of summer. “Even though the number of jobs added was more than expected, the unemployment rate at 8.3 percent is still too high,” said Sageworks CEO Brian Hamilton. [More]

Jul09

(Temporary) Help wanted, apparently - SageworksStats on Forbes.com

June unemployment in the U.S. was flat, and nearly a third of jobs added were in the temporary-help services industry, a field that has shown strong growth over the last 12 months, according to data from Sageworks Inc. “During the last 12 months, privately held employment service firms have seen their revenues grow by almost 20 percent annually, which far outpaces the average annual growth of around 10 percent for private companies across all industries,” said Sageworks analyst Libby Bierman. “That sales growth validates what the employment numbers released this morning showed—the economy has recently been adding a lot of temporary jobs, which are positions that employment service firms routinely fill.” [More]

Jul03

The health care ruling's upside for private companies

Thursday's U.S. Supreme Court ruling is reviving impassioned discussions about whether President Obama's health care law will be positive or negative for businesses, especially smaller ones. And while those debates will continue for months or maybe years, one immediate, positive impact on owners of privately held businesses is that they know more about what to expect in the short term, said Brian Hamilton, co-founder and CEO of Sageworks Inc. [More]

Jun05

Why aren’t companies hiring? Sageworks Stats @ Forbes.com

The U.S. economy’s paltry addition of 69,000 jobs in May has intensified the political finger-pointing, but the truth is that no one really knows for sure why the economy is growing yet too few jobs are being created, said Sageworks CEO Brian Hamilton. “The jobs report is disappointing because, at this stage of the recovery, the economy should be generating more jobs,” said Hamilton, who is also co-founder of the financial information company. The sluggish job growth is a paradox, he said, “because privately held companies, which actually produce the vast majority of new jobs, are performing quite well.” [More]

Jun04

Banking news you might have missed...

A Sageworks roundup of recent banking industry news: Bank de-registrations (from The Washington Post), profile of lobbyist for stricter bank rules (from The New York Times), FDIC's quarterly report (from the FDIC). [More]

May23

Private-company sales, margin growth continue - Sageworks Stats @ Forbes.com

Privately held U.S. companies – the millions of businesses that drive job creation and GDP –are growing sales so far this year at about the same rate as they did for all of 2011, according to new data from Sageworks Inc., a financial information company. Companies across all industries, on average, have generated an 8.1 percent increase in sales so far this year, compared with 8.25 percent growth for all of 2011, based on a financial statement analysis. On a trailing 12-month basis, sales growth has been in the 6 to 8 percent range each month of 2012.  Profitability, meanwhile, has improved year to date for private companies, compared with 2011. The average net profit margin for all private companies was 6.84 percent through May 10, an improvement from the 5.87 percent average margin for all of last year. Net profit margin shows how many dollars of profit a company generates from each $100 in sales. All in all, said Sageworks analyst Samara Zippin, companies continue to generate healthy gains. “Overall, private companies are still doing well, and we’re seeing similar growth trends to last year, while profit margins have improved quite a bit,” she said. “If 2012 continues as it is now throughout the year, I think we’ll see positive trends comparable to 2011.” “The biggest caveat is the unemployment rate,” she said. Unemployment of around 8 percent remains too high, especially considering the U.S. is more than 30 months into the recovery. The fear is that if unemployment doesn’t fall at a faster rate, the economy may bump into the next recession before job growth is healthy. Zippin said it may be that lower costs are behind the margin gains. Indeed, average gross profit margin is higher so far in 2012 than it was, on average, for 2011. Overhead, or sellling, general and administrative expenses, relative to sales has been higher. “It appears that regardless of what sales growth is doing, companies are learning to become more efficient,” she said. Through its cooperative data model, Sageworks collects financial statements for private companies from accounting firms, banks and credit unions, and aggregates the data at an approximate rate of 1,000 statements a day. Net profit margin has been adjusted to exclude taxes and include owner compensation in excess of their market-rate salaries. These adjustments are commonly made to private company financials in order to provide a more accurate picture of the companies’ operational performance. How important are private companies? While Wall Street focuses on the performance of public companies, not all employers in the U.S. contribute to new job creation equally. Out of the 27 million businesses in America, only about 6,200 are publicly traded on listed exchanges. Most others are privately held, and many of them are small businesses. No government agency tracks private company performance by itself. But small businesses, which the government considers to be any company with fewer than 500 employees, drive approximately half of GDP and 65% of new job creation, according to the Small Business Administration. Figures for all privately held businesses, including medium and large private companies, would be even higher, assuming most small businesses (by the government’s definition) aren’t publicly traded. Sageworks’ industry ratios show that over the last 12 months, industries that have had the highest growth rates among privately held companies have included manufacturing, mining, transportation and warehousing, and professional services. Construction, too, has been among the strongest sectors, with roughly 15 percent sales growth over the last 12 months. Health care and social assistance (NAICS code 62) and accommodations and lodging (NAICS code 72) have each generated sales growth that trails the all-industry average over the last 12 months. Nevertheless, sales growth in those sectors has been around 6 percent, outpacing the broader economy. See the entire post on Forbes.com here.