Graeme Wearden 

BrightHouse and Carluccio’s fall into administration; oil hits 17-year low – as it happened

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news
  
  

Carluccio’s restaurant in Canary Wharf
People dine at Carluccio’s restaurant in Canary Wharf before the coronavirus crisis. Photograph: David Pearson/Alamy Stock Photo

Closing summary

Time for a recap

The economic impact of the coronavirus has driven two UK firms into administration today, with more likely to follow.

The Italian restaurant chain Carluccio’s and rent-to-own retailer BrightHouse both collapsed, putting about 4,400 jobs at risk, as the government’s coronavirus lockdown biting the high street.

Retail experts warned that more firms will also collapse, as customers continue to obey the government lockdown.

Economists warned that the UK economy could shrink by 15% in the next three months, an extremely sharp contraction.

A survey showed that half the UK population expect a recession this year, with 19% bracing for a depression.

Fears of a deep slowdown drove the oil price to its lowest levels since 2002, as analysts predicted that many wells may have to be shut down due to weak demand.

Travel companies are suffering too. Airline easyJet was forced to ground all its planes, due to a slump in demand for flights, while cruise operator Cunard suspended sailings for another month.

Shopping centre operator Hammerson reported that two-thirds of its customers haven’t paid next quarter’s rent:

But stock markets have picked up, with Britain’s FTSE 100 ending 1% higher after a wobbly start.

Good evening. GW

Emerging economies face a “looming financial tsunami” from the coronavirus pandemic, and need urgent help from rich countries, says the United Nations:

Andrew Johnson, Money Expert at the UK’s Money and Pensions Service, says BrightHouse customers who are struggling to meet their repayments should contact the firm:

“Even though Brighthouse has gone into administration, customers should still keep up with their normal repayments unless a payment holiday has already been agreed.

At this particularly difficult time for many families, anyone who is going to struggle to make payments on time should contact the firm as soon as possible to see if they can offer any additional flexibility. Free debt advice could also help you get back on track – find support near you by using our debt advice locator.”

More guidance for Brighthouse customers is available at www.moneyadviceservice.org.uk/brighthouse-administration

Most European stock markets ended the day higher, although Spain was dragged back by heavy losses among its banks (after the ECB blocked eurozone banks from issuing dividends before October)

  • UK FTSE 100: up 53 points or 1% at 5563
  • German DAX: up 183 points or 1.9% at 9815
  • French CAC: up 27 points or 0.6% at 4378
  • Italian FTSE MIB: up 49 points or 0.3% at 16,872
  • Spanish IBEX: down 118 points or 1.7% at 6659

After a late rally, Britain’s FTSE 100 share index has closed nearly 1% higher tonight.

The Footsie, which fell over 150 points at one stage today, has closed 53 points higher at 5563.

Publishing and educational company Pearson was the top riser, up 8%, followed by Rentokil (+6.6%).

Dr Gordon Fletcher, retail expert from the University of Salford Business School, points out that Carluccio’s and BrightHouse were already in trouble, before the coronavirus pushed them under today.

“Carluccio’s were already struggling and at risk before this started. Social distancing has really ensured that it was a quick ending. This closure also reveals the impact that the relatively recent death of the founder has had on the business’s organisational culture.

“Brighthouse’s closure reflects the impact of increased public scrutiny and dissatisfaction with the business model among its target customers. The closure of stores will be a challenge for its current customers who must continue to make their payments despite the shutdown.

UK manufacturing group Melrose have just issued a profits warning, due to the impact of the coronavirus on its business.

In a statement to the City, Melrose says:

Following a successful 2019, the Group traded in line with management expectations from January through to mid-March. From mid-March onwards a significant deterioration started to be seen and was experienced in the end markets that Melrose serves as a result of COVID-19.

Given the current uncertainty around future demand as governments carry out unprecedented actions in many countries, the Group is unable to provide a meaningful outlook at the current time, but is closely monitoring and adapting to all developments.

The firm has also decided not to pay the 2019 final dividend due to be paid in May 2020, and to keep any further dividends under review...

Shares in Melrose, which had been one of the biggest fallers all day, are now down 20% as trading ends.

Updated

Back in the markets, shares are embarking on a late rally.

Britain’s FTSE 100 has burst into positive territory for the first time today, up 28 points or 0.5%. European stocks are up too, following gains on Wall Street.

Investors are fluctuating between fretting about a global downturn, and hoping that the huge stimulus packages announced by central bankers and governments will mean a quick recovery later this year.

Full story: Carluccio's and BrightHouse collapse into administration

The collapse of restaurant chain Carluccio’s and rent-to-own retailer BrightHouse are a clear sign the government’s coronavirus lockdown is biting the high street, writes my colleague Sarah Butler:

Analysts believe a substantial number of restaurant, retail and leisure businesses will struggle to survive in the coming weeks. Mark Brumby, a hospitality and leisure analyst at Langton Capital, predicted that five or six firms could collapse this week alone. The coronavirus outbreak, he said, had “hit the industry like a brick”.

BrightHouse’s stores were also already closed under the government’s coronavirus control measures but administrators said the business would continue delivering smaller items to homes and, where possible, would continue servicing items already in people’s homes.

More here (including confirmation that BrightHouse aren’t released from their financial agreements):

In other retail news, the surge in supermarket panic buying may be on the wane.

Online bank Starling, which has 1.25 million UK account holders, said transactions in supermarkets peaked two weekends ago and had been falling since.

“Our data suggests that the panic buying seen in the UK’s supermarkets over recent weekends peaked two weeks ago on Saturday 14 March, with the number of transactions on that day up about 15% compared to pre-virus levels.

Over the weekend of 21-22 March transaction volumes fell back to levels seen before the crisis.”

Nigel Frith, a senior market analyst at Asktraders.com, predicts many more retailers will fall into administration during the coronavirus crisis - despite official efforts to prop firms up.

The increasingly stricter measures implemented by the government to contain the spread of coronavirus, combined with collapsing consumer confidence is proving to be every retailer’s worst nightmare. The sector was already in a troubled place before coronavirus struck, now the chances of survival are greatly reduced. Brighthouse and Carluccio’s are just the latest in what promises to be a very extensive list of retailers that will struggle to make it through the coming 3 months.

It’s no surprise that coronavirus has been the nail in the coffin for these retailers. Last month Brighthouse chain announced plans to axe 30 stores in a bid to salvage the company.

All BrightHouse’s outstanding rent-to-own and cash loans remain subject to the original agreed terms and that customers should continue to make payments in the usual way, flags up Money Saving Expert.

Those loans are an asset on BrightHouse’s books, so it seems likely that the administrator would find a buyer for them, even if the whole company wasn’t rescued.

Jim McMahon, Labour & Co-operative MP for Oldham West & Royton, makes a good point:

The crisis in UK retail is having a serious knock-on effect on landlords.

Quarterly rent payments (to cover April-June) were due last week. But Hammerson, one of Britain’s biggest shopping centre owners, says it only received a third of what was due.

Hammerson, which owns the Bullring in Birmingham and Brent Cross in London, said it had been deluged with requests for rent deferrals, cuts or waivers as the majority of retailers have been forced to close their shops as part of the Covid-19 lockdown.

More here:

BrightHouse will not be the most mourned company to collapse in this crisis.

The company had become notorious for the steep charges it inflicted on its customers, who had to turn to rent-to-buy services as they didn’t have enough cash to buy a TV or fridge up front.

Once signed up, they ended up paying MUCH more than the actual price tag of the item (a reminder that being poor can be more expensive, at times, than being rich).

BrightHouse said its ‘representative APR’ was 69.9% - but actual interest rates can depend on an applicant’s circumstances. In contrast, Barclaycard Rewards charges 22.9% (if your borrowing history is good enough to qualify).

As we wrote back in 2017, some BrightHouse customers ended up deeply out of pocket:

Lisa Brady, 30, who lives in Hamilton, Scotland, and has four children, is typical of the company’s customers, often young single mums. She tells Guardian Money: “I’m on benefits and it has been my lifeline, but the payments are just shocking.”

She went to BrightHouse to buy her autistic son a computer which, she said, would have cost about £600 at Currys. But with repayments, that turned into £2,287 over 26 months. “My advice to other mums is to look about first, avoid BrightHouse,” she says.

Eventually regulators took action, fining the company almost £15m.

As one reader puts it in the comments below:

Hot salty tears here about high street sharks BrightHouse going down the toilet.

The Covid-19 pandemic is a drastic shock to the UK economy, creating a “Darwinian” situation in which only the fittest companies will emerge.

So says John Colley, associate dean at Warwick Business School, writing about the collapse of BrightHouse and Carluccio’s today:

“Those companies without cash or only limited availability of credit have a major problem. Many businesses simply do not have access to adequate cash or credit lines and will disappear during the next six months, only the strongest will survive. Unless there is significant government underwriting of bank debt many loans will be foreclosed and banks will not be keen to increase their exposure.

“Two principal industries that will be major sufferers as creditors to bankrupt companies are the property industry and banking. Rents are unlikely to be paid, bank loans will default, suppliers more generally will have a hard time as customers are unable or unwilling to pay for supplies as they conserve cash. In some cases this is deferral in others the debt will never be paid.

This can be a particular problem for companies owned by private equity investors, who uses debt extensively, Colley adds:

The consequence of high debt is that many of these businesses will now be severely troubled.

Those private equity firms also have huge cash piles, so can now decide which of their firms to save, which to let go.... and which other struggling firms to snaffle at a bargain price instead...

As Colley puts it:

There will be many good businesses encumbered with too much debt that can be bought out of receivership.

“In effect this is Darwinist survival of the fittest compressed into six months. Business will not be the same again.”

Administrator Geoff Rowley of FRP, who has now taken control of Carluccio’s, says he hopes to rescue the business and protect staff:

“We are operating in unprecedented times and the issues currently facing the hospitality sector following the onset of COVID-19 are well documented.

“In the absence of being able to continue to trade Carluccio’s, in the short term, we are urgently focused on the options available to preserve the future of the business and protect its employees.”

However, some Carluccio’s staff reported that their pay for March was cut by 50% after the group shut its deli counters and restaurants:

Updated

Sky News’s Mark Kleinman has more details of today’s developments:

A total of 4,500 high street jobs are hanging by a thread after BrightHouse, the rent-to-own retailer, and restaurant chain Carluccio’s filed for administration.

Sky News understands that the two companies were in court on Monday morning to formalise insolvency proceedings after closures triggered by the coronavirus outbreak tipped them into bankruptcy.

BrightHouse, which employs 2,400 people, has appointed Grant Thornton as administrator, with an announcement expected by Tuesday morning.

More here.

The BBC says anyone who’s renting an item from BrightHouse (to eventually own it) should keep paying -- even though the firm’s now entering administration.

Julie Palmer, from corporate recovery business Begbies Traynor, said: “Coronavirus was the final nail in the coffin for BrightHouse.”

BrightHouse has 240 shops and 2,400 employees, who now face the loss of their jobs. Its 200,000 rent-to-own customers make monthly payments for household appliances, in effect renting goods (and paying interest) until they have paid in full.

Many are on low incomes and find it difficult to access credit from mainstream lenders to pay for fridges, TVs, washing machines and other electrical items. Only about a third are in work.

Failing to make repayments, even now the company is in administration, would lead to extra charges and harm a credit score. Some may find that insurance policies sold alongside these rental agreements may no longer continue as the company has ceased trading.

Reuters reports that administrators will try to find a buyer for Carluccio’s:

British restaurant chain Carluccio’s entered administration on Monday, putting around 2,000 jobs at risk, after challenging trading conditions on the high street were exacerbated by the spread of coronavirus.

Joint administrators from advisory firm FRP have been appointed to explore options including a sale of all or parts of the group, which was founded in 1991 by Italian chef Antonio Carluccio.

BrightHouse and Carluccio's enter administration

Two UK companies have just fallen into administration, as the Covid-19 crisis continues to damage the British economy.

Brighthouse, the rent-to-own electricals giant, and restaurant chain Carluccio’s have both entered administration, putting more than 4,000 jobs at risk.

Both suffered a slump in customer numbers since the government instructed people to stay at home, and non-essential shops to shut.

Carluccio’s, which has 73 branches and about 2,000 employees, has been on the brink of administration for days -- a restaurant group can’t operate for long with no customers. It had already been forced to shut 30 loss-making sites in 2018.

Brighthouse was also already in serious straits before Covid-19 hit, having been ordered to repay millions of pounds to consumers for misselling goods on high-cost credit deals.

Adam French, Which? Consumer Rights Expert, explained last week:

“Few former customers will mourn the loss ofBrightHouse which has been embroiled in a mis-selling scandal since 2017, however its imminent collapse will be concerning for employees and those still waiting to resolve claims against the firm.

“If the retailer goes bust, an administrator is likely to oversee the scores of mis-selling claims lodged against the firm. However, claimants may have to wait longer for their compensation and receive a smaller sum.

“Current customers with outstanding debt will be expected to keep making repayments to the administrator in the event of a collapse. While those with a warranty policy may still be able to make a claim if their product is faulty.”

Updated

Workers voice alarm over Covid-19 treatment

Workers from businesses across the UK have told MPs that they are being put at risk by employers who insist they keep working, despite the coronavirus lockdown.

The Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) Committee received the warnings, after asking employees to get in touch with their experiences of working during the Covid-19 crisis.

Several workers reported concerns over the last week, and the committee have just published them.

One EE call centre worker said:

There are hundreds of people working in our centres, there has been no deep cleaning done and some people are off self-isolating because they have symptoms of the virus, no tests can be done on these advisors so we don’t know if any of them have the virus or not but they still were coming to work before going off to self-isolate. We are asked now to stay 2 metres apart when at desks but when all the teams are in this is going to prove very difficult as there will not be enough workspace to do this.

We are still using the one lift we have altogether and still passing each other on the stairs, in the toilets and in the canteen and also queuing for food together.

Another, from insurer AXA, said some staff were being made to commute to work -- including a tutorial about remote working(!) that didn’t go well.

Yesterday, high risk members of staff were forced to commute into the office for training on ‘how to work from home.’ The training should’ve taken 45 minutes but staff were made to wait around for 3 hours until AXA realised the training couldn’t be delivered and the staff were sent home without laptops. Shocking behaviour from a company who advertises how important health is.

A Barclays Bank worker said the company wasn’t showing enough concern for front-line staff:

An area leader is condoning staff bringing their children into work if they don’t have childcare which again goes directly against the government ruling on maintaining social distancing.

To encourage our customers to social distance staff have had to go on their own volition and out of their own pocket pay for tape to mark out spaces on the floor, the 2-metre rule isn’t being followed between customers or colleagues.

Our branch hasn’t been cleaned this week as our current cleaner is on holiday and there are not provisions to replace her this week. Meaning staff are having to do this.

Staff at IWG Group (who own Regus business Centres) are also being treated badly, according to the partner of one.

There is no flexible working or working from home, no hand sanitiser and they are being asked to continue to conduct tours of the centres, host meetings and key-holders continue to come into centres. It seems madness these remain open when libraries, schools, retail outlets are forced to close. Staff are being told if they do not come in, they will not be paid. This means my partner is having to go into work, breaking government guidelines and potentially infecting our household. It is beyond irresponsible and communicating that Regus is very much ‘open for business’ sends the wrong message.

There is a backlash on Twitter, a petition and staff are in tears as they are put in an invidious position, deciding between health or an income.

Regus, though, insists all staff working are ‘dedicated volunteers’....

The partner of a DPD depot worker also had a worrying story:

Last week they were handed information for the coronavirus outbreak which told them, amongst other things, that if they take time off to self-isolate or because they have contracted the coronavirus, this would be added to their Bradford factor index score - therefore risking disciplinary action and/or termination of employment.

Committee chair Rachel Reeves says bosses will be held to account:

“When this pandemic passes, businesses will have to answer for how they treated their workers and suppliers. The Government will be judged on the effectiveness of their response.

Many businesses will be able to tell of how they did everything they could while others will be found wanting. The BEIS Committee will continue to press for action on these issues and hold the Government and businesses to account for their response to this pandemic.”

Updated

TV sales in Britain have surged since people were told they should stay home and only go out for essential trips to the shops or to exercise, according to data firm GfK.

Sales volumes were almost 60% higher in the week to 21 March, with the amount spent in total rising by 43%.

The nationwide Covid-19 lockdown triggered a particularly rush for sets with smaller screens (42 inches or less). This meant the average price paid for a TV was the lowest seen this year.

Kelly Whitwick, UK retail lead at GfK, says:

“This suggests people are buying basic models for practical solutions, rather than splashing out to enhance the viewing experience with a better model. Basically, people are facing having their entire household at home every day; possibly with the need to keep distance from each other, and almost certainly with very different views on what they want to watch – so they are quickly buying an extra TV to spread out around the house.”

More people are watching DVDs or Blu-ray disks, with the number more than doubling to 11% from the previous week. Download to own content viewing also doubled, to 9%. On the other hand, there has been a drop in the number of people accessing premium TV packages such as Sky Sports. This is hardly surprising as all sports events have been cancelled.

The slump in the oil price has already forced some oil rigs to shut down, reports our energy correspondent Jillian Ambrose:

Global oil producers have begun shutting down their oil rigs on the largest scale in 35 years as the coronavirus continues to drive market prices to their lowest level since 2002.

The shutdown of oil wells has already wiped out almost 1m barrels a day from global production, but the figure is expected to rise as producers run out of space to store their extra oil as the crisis continues.

In some landlocked markets in the US, where storage space is scarce and shipping costs are high, oil producers started oil well “shut-ins” late last week rather than pay buyers to take their barrels.

In Canada the price of a barrel of oil fell below the cost of shipping it to a refinery – $5 – making it more economic for producers to shut down their wells than plummet to “negative prices”....

Almost 300,000 of Ireland’s 2.3m workforce have been lost their jobs due to coronavirus (12%), according to the latest Department of Employment figures.
The department said it had processed 389,000 applications for Covid-19 unemployment payments since 16 March, the equivalent of 19-month workload. By last Friday 283,000 people received coronavirus dole payments under the Pandemic Unemployment Payment plan.

If extrapolated for the UK it would mean roughly 3.9m of the 33m workforce would soon be on some sort of coronavirus support.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s wage guarantee scheme could mean workers are ‘furloughed’ instead (with the UK government covering 80% of earnings up to £2,500 per month). But last week, the Westminster government reported that 477,000 people had already applied for universal credit, having lost their jobs in the crisis.

After a jittery morning, the FTSE 100 index of blue-chip stocks is down around 0.7%, or 40 points, at 5469.

With 75 shares down today, and only 25 up, it’s been a poor morning for investors.

Curiously, BP and Royal Dutch Shell are among the risers despite the slump in the oil price (perhaps some weaker rivals are more likely to be pushed out of business, as Goldman Sachs outlined today?)

The FTSE 250 index, which has a greater focus on the UK industry, is down 3.3%.

After months of disruption, China’s economy appears to be recovering as people return to shops and restaurants, reports Fidelity International.

Ned Salter, their head of global research, writes that consumer demand is rising, offering “a ray of hope in the economic wreckage from coronavirus”.

He writes:

“We estimate more than half of the restaurants in large Chinese cities have reopened, based on information gathered from operators, although many are running in shorter business hours than normal. Fast-food chains are generally doing better than high-end venues, as many customers prefer picking up takeaways to minimise infection risks. To assure eaters, restaurant owners have taken health measures such as regular disinfection and wider spacing between tables.

“Youngsters are leading a slow return to shopping malls across China. We estimate more than 80 percent of retail stores have reopened, although their average daily sales have dropped by around 40 per cent on average from March 2019 levels. Sportswear retailers like Li Ning and Anta are rebounding from a February slump and may resume year-on-year growth in June.

Cunard suspends sailings for another month

Just in: Cruise operator Cunard has suspended all voyages until May 15th, a month later than first planned.

Cunard had originally paused sailings until April 11, due to the coronavirus outbreak. But it has now extended this as a “preventative measure”, due to the global clampdown on travel.

Cunard preident Simon Palethorpe says:

“The impact of COVID-19 is affecting personal routines and businesses as well as placing significant travel restrictions around the world,”

“Everyone in the Cunard team is aware of the need to support the management and containment of COVID-19 globally. This includes protecting the health and safety of our guests and crew. It is therefore right we extend the pause in operations.

Putting thousands of people on a boat and sailing between various cities across the world is clearly incompatible with government advice to stay at home and avoid other people.

Updated

Goldman Sachs: Covid-19 is game-changer for oil

Goldman Sachs have predicted that oil companies will be forced to cut down wells in their, because demand is slumping due to the coronavirus.

In a new note, they say Covid-19 is causing “the largest economic shock of our lifetimes”.

In the short term, production sites - particularly on-shore, will be turned off, they write, as the oil transportation network is already being overwhelmed by surplus stock.

Indeed, given the cost of shutting down a well, a producer would be willing to pay someone to dispose of a barrel, implying negative prices in landlocked areas.

An astonishing thought.

But in the long-term, this disruption could actually lead to an (eventual) spike in prices, as the industry won’t be able to boost production fast enough when demand comes back.

Goldman argue:

The ultimate magnitude of these shut-ins, which is still unknown, will likely permanently alter the energy industry and its geopolitics.

Back in the City, shares are recovering some of their earlier losses.

The FTSE 100 is currently down 0.5% or 33 points at 5477 - an improvement on its earlier slide. But there are still some hefty loss, with Meggitt (-14%) Melrose (-9%) and Rolls-Royce (-9%) still leading the fallers today.

Oil is still suffering - with Brent crude down over 8% today still, at $22.90 per barrel (still a 17-year low).

YouGov: Most Brits expect recession or depression

Polling firm YouGov has found that more than half of Britons (52%) expect a recession within the next year.

That’s not too surprising -- most City economists expect the economy to contract sharply too.

More worryingly ,nearly one in five people (19%) are expecting a full-blown depression (typically meaning slumping output, extremely high unemployment and widespread company closures).

YouGov found that people are much less optimistic about their own financial situation, business activity and house prices - due to the impact of Covid-19 on the economy.

Kay Neufeld, head of macroeconomics at the Centre for Economics and Business Research (who also carry out the survey), says the UK’s lockdown is having a very severe impact on the economy.

Government mandated closures of non-essential shops, pubs, restaurants and other establishments will have a devastating effect on several industries and in particular on the leisure and hospitality sectors.

It is now highly likely that the economic crisis will lead to an increase in unemployment and a reduction in household incomes in the coming months, although the Government and the Bank of England are working hard to soften the blow. To limit the economic damage from the crisis, it will be crucial to get the pandemic under control as quickly as possible.”

The coronavirus crisis has caused an unprecedented slump in confidence across the eurozone.

Optimism across consumers, companies and investors fell at a record rate this month, according to the EC’s latest sentiment index.

Economic sentiment in the euro area fell to 94.5 points in March from 103.4 in February. In the wider EU, it slumped to 94.8 from 103.

This massive slump in confidence is the biggest one-month decline recorded since the survey began in 1985.

The true picture is probably now even worse, as the survey pre-dates the latest physical distancing rules, as the EC explains:

Importantly, in many countries the vast majority of survey responses were collected before strict containment measures were enacted to combat the spread of the Corona virus

Sentiment fell sharply in Italy, the European country worst hit by the health crisis, and in Germany, the zone’s largest economy.

In Britain, economic sentiment dipped less dramatically -- but that may be because the UK’s confinement rules came later.

which has now left the EU, the decline was less marked, by just 3.5 points to 92.0.

The average levels for all figures since 2000 is 100.

Ancient history corner: The number of mortgages approved in the UK jumped to 73,546 last month, from nearly 71,000 in January, the Bank of England reports today.

That suggests Britain’s housing market was picking up... just before Covid-19 smashed demand. With the UK government now instructing people NOT to move house if possible until the crisis is over, mortgage approvals are probably now falling like the oil price.

Over in Germany, engineering firms are struggling to get their hands on raw materials and parts, according to industry association VDMA.

But.... there are also signs that China’s manufacturing sector is returning to work, after the coronavirus outbreak forced many firms to stay closed.

VDMA warns (via Reuters):

“The proportion of companies whose operations are affected rose from 60% to 84% within two weeks...

However, the situation in China and South Korea seems to be easing slightly.

In addition, many engineering companies are reporting a significant increase in orders from their Chinese customers .

JCB reopens factory for ventilator project

Digger maker JCB is to reopen one of its factories in order to make metal casings for a new ventilator designed by vacuum cleaner maker Dyson.

The newly designed ventilator is expected to be produced within weeks by Dyson in response to the coronavirus crisis, with the aim of producing 10,000 in preparation for a surge of critical cases of Covid-19. The production will start once the device gains regulatory approval.

JCB had furloughed most of its 6,500 employees across nine factories as the pandemic dented demand and stopped crucial supplies, but the company said on Monday that 50 employees will return to restart production.

Dyson’s move came after the prime minister appealed to major manufacturing companies to boost production of ventilators.

A separate effort including carmakers and aerospace companies such as Ford, the McLaren F1 team, Airbus, and Rolls-Royce is expected to start production of an existing ventilator design this week.

JCB chairman Lord Bamford, a major donor to Boris Johnson and the Leave campaign in the EU referendum, said:

“This project has gone from design to production in just a matter of days and I am delighted that we have been to deploy the skills of our talented engineering, design and fabrication teams so quickly at a time of national crisis.

This is also a global crisis, of course, and we will naturally help with the production of more housings if these ventilators are eventually required by other countries.”

Analyst: We could run out of oil storage soon....

Jack Allardyce, oil and gas analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald Europe predicts that the oil price will keep falling.

He points out that Saudi Arabia is resisting pressure from Washington to curb production, having dramatically boosted production this month.

That could push US crude prices sharply below today’s $20 per barrel, he predicts:

“Crude prices plunged further over the weekend, with WTI slipping below $20 and Brent around the $23 level, as Saudi Arabia said it was not in talks with Russia despite Washington pressuring both sides to help stabilise markets.

“The potential for a renewed supply pact had been one of the few factors helping to prop up benchmarks, as coronavirus-driven demand destruction has continued to outweigh global stimulus efforts.

“With major producers pumping barrels freely and the IEA suggesting that short-term demand could fall by a fifth due to travel restrictions, global storage is likely to hit capacity over the next two-to-three months. This is likely to be particularly damaging for US crude, with prices in the Permian region potentially hitting single digits. While we believe that current levels are unsustainable in the medium term given achievable breakeven prices, the ongoing uncertainty around COVID-19 and apparent stalemate between Riyadh and Moscow is likely to cause continued downward pressure over the coming weeks.

“While prices have not yet reached the relative falls seen during the Global Financial Crisis of 2008, the rate of the crash is unprecedented, and the pain looks far from over. “

Brent crude falls below $23

The selloff in the oil price is now accelerating, driving Brent crude below $23 per barrel for the first time since November 2002.

Neil Wilson of Markets.com says oil is facing a ‘perfect storm’. One one hand: a complete collapse in demand due to the coronavirus. On the other: a price war launched by Saudi Arabia after Russia refused to cut production.

He adds:

The thing to stress is that we simply do not have any idea when demand will recover – it could take months to get back to some semblance of normality. And just as this is happening the Saudis are opening the spigots. It’s getting to the point where we run out of places to store the oil.

All the main European stock markets have dropped in early trading, with the Stoxx 600 down 1.3%.

This extends Friday’s losses, although after a surge in Thursday stocks are still rather higher than a week ago:

Across Europe, bank shares are dragging markets into the red after they were ordered not to pay dividends.

Italy’s Unicredit (-4.8%), ABN Amro (-6%) and the Netherland’s ING (-7.8%) are all suffering from the European Central Bank’s instruction to freeze dividend payments and share buybacks this year.

The move, announced on Friday night, is part of the ECB’s attempts to prevent coronavirus triggering a credit crunch in Europe.

Britain’s FTSE 250 index of medium-sized companies, has also dropped in early trading.

Again, the impact of the coronavirus is clear. Dixons Carphone, which issued a Covid-19 profit warning last week, are down 15%.

Cineworld, which was forced to shut its cinemas this month, are down 18%.

Updated

FTSE 100 drops in early trading

The London stock market has opened in the red, dashing hopes of small gains.

The FTSE 100 has shed 94 points in early trading, a drop of 1.7%, taking it down to 5417.

Jet-engine maker Rolls-Royce are the top faller, down 11% (demand for engines, and services, will slump if more airlines follow easyJet’s example and ground their flights).

Aerospace group Meggitt and engineering firm Melrose are both down 9%.

Retailer Next, which was forced to shut its online shopping service last week, has lost 7%.

EasyJet grounds all jets

In happier days, budget airline easyJet would be celebrating a drop in the oil price.

But it won’t benefit this time. Instead, easyJet has just grounded its entire fleet, due to the collapse in demand for holidays during the coronavirus lockdown.

The company says it has repatriated more than 45,000 passengers, who were stranded abroad when the pandemic struck. With that task now complete, jets are being parked up and staff are being put on ‘furlough’.

This means cabin crew will qualify for the government’s job retention scheme (which pays 80% of wages, up to £2,500 per month).

Johan Lundgren, easyJet CEO said:

“I am extremely proud of the way in which people across easyJet have given their absolute best at such a challenging time, including so many crew who have volunteered to operate rescue flights to bring our customers home.

We are working tirelessly to ensure that easyJet continues to be well positioned to overcome the challenges of coronavirus.”

China cuts bank rates to help economy

Fears of a global recession also forced China’s central bank to ease monetary policy overnight.

The People’s Bank of China cut its seven-day reverse repo rate, which it charges banks for short-term loans, to 2.2% from 2.4%. That’s the biggest cut in five years, Reuters says.

The move should help China’s banking sector to support the real economy, where firms have suffered from factory shutdowns and a slump in orders from abroad.

Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics, says:

“This will take some pressure off the banks which have so far been forced to bear the brunt of the cost of propping up struggling firms via preferential loans.

“But a lot more easing will be needed, especially on the fiscal front, to help the economy return to its pre-virus trend.”

UK economy 'to shrink 15% next quarter'

The slump in the oil price comes as economists predict UK economic output could plunge by an unprecedented 15% in the next three months.

All due to the coronavirus, of course, as my colleague Rob Davies explains:

The deepest recession since the financial crisis is now all but unavoidable, according to analysts at the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR), after businesses shut up shop and consumer spending fell dramatically as a result of lockdown restrictions.

The centre said it expected the economy to have shrunk marginally in the first three months of the year by 0.5%, followed by the steepest economic contraction since comparable records began more than 20 years ago.

More reaction to oil’s slump to 2002-lows:

Bloomberg’s John Authers predicts that the oil price will keep falling....

...and points out it’s already historically low by one measure:

Some oil producers could be forced to stop pumping because they run out of places to put their unwanted crude, says the Financial Times:

“This is a historic oil price collapse, and it is not done yet as the system physically runs out of places to put all the oil,” said Jason Bordoff, a former energy adviser to the Obama administration and the founder of the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University.

“The pain in the shale patch is going to be severe. We will see production shut-ins accelerate.”

Introduction: Oil price sinks

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of the world economy, the financial markets, the eurozone and business.

With the world economy in crisis, oil prices have sunk to fresh 17-year lows this morning.

Traders are ditching crude amid signs that energy demand will sink this year, just as the ongoing Saudi-Russia price war leaves the market saturated with supply.

Brent crude, sourced from the North Sea, has fallen 5% to just $23 per barrel -- its lowest level since November 2002. US crude oil is also tumbling, dropping below $20 towards the 17-year low hit last week.

This extends the stunning slump in crude prices over the recent weeks - Brent crude hit $70 in January, before Covid-19 struck the global economy.

The slump comes as City economists predict global growth will slump alarmingly in April-June, with many forecasting that 10% will be slashed from advanced economies such as the UK.

Kyle Rodda of IG points out that recent emergency moves by central banks may have calmed the markets, but won’t prevent a recession.

Markets are tangibly more pessimistic about the outlook for the global economy. Last week’s positivity around the US fiscal stimulus package has waned, giving way to level of risk aversion.

Risks to the financial system are lower thanks to last week’s extraordinary interventions from the US Federal Reserve.....And oil prices have hit 17-year lows, as weaker demand conditions continues compound crude’s building global oversupply.

In normal times, cheap oil would be a boost for consumers - lowering transport costs. But if you’re stuck at home, it hardly matters how much petrol costs.

David Madden of London Capital Group explains:

Even though we have seen huge intervention from central banks and governments recently, the oil market pushed lower as dealers are afraid that demand will severely drop off on account of the pandemic.

To make matters worse, the Saudi Arabia-Russia price war is hurting the oil market too as the Saudis are keen to push the price lower to get back at Moscow. The slump in oil is hitting the shale industry too, which is concerning the US government.

Overnight, US president Donald Trump abandoned his plan to end Covid-19 restrictions by Easter, bowing to pressure from medical experts. That should save lives.

However, Trump also stunned observers by claiming it would be a major success to keep deaths below 100,000 -- an admission that covonavirus is going to hit America hard, and harder than he’s claimed before.

Asia-Pacific markets have been mixed today, with Japan’s Nikkei falling 1.5%.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 surged by 7%, after its government launched a stimulus package. IG says that’s its best day ever:

European equity markets are currently on track for a mildly positive open, with the FTSE 100 up around 0.5% in pre-market trading.

There’s not much in the economic calendar, beyond the EC’s latest survey of eurozone confidence - which is expected to be dire.

The agenda

  • 10am BST: Eurozone economic confidence index: forecast to slump to 91.6 from 103.5
 

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