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Economic Times
a day ago
- Business
- Economic Times
London suffers most job losses after tax hikes
iStock Representative image. London is bearing the brunt of the UK's jobs slowdown as a combination of tax rises, elevated wage costs and weak consumer spending force the city's business to cut payrolls faster than in the rest of the country. The capital has shed almost 45,000 payrolls since October when the Labour government announced a £26 billion ($35 billion) hike in employers' national insurance-a payroll tax-and a new higher minimum wage, according to tax data. It means one in four of all job losses across the country have come in the UK's most productive region. Combined with the surrounding South East region, the rate rises to nearly four in 10 lost jobs. Retail and hospitality are among the worst-affected sectors, according to figures published by the Office for National Statistics earlier in the week, and a large share of these roles are based in London-business group UKHospitality says about a third of jobs in its sector are in the pubs and restaurants going is increasingly difficult, according to Kate Nicholls, UKHospitality's CEO. She said London was the least competitive city in Europe in terms of taxes and other costs and has lost around 30,000 hospitality jobs over the last year."The rent is higher, the business rates are higher, the wage costs are higher, and we are not seeing enough money coming through the front door to be able to cover those costs and for businesses to remain viable," Nicholls data from Indeed - a jobs website - confirmed that vacancies in London have dropped faster than the national average since October. Retail and hospitality job ads in the capital fell almost 40% over that period, compared with declines of 26% and 9%, respectively, recorded across the country. Public v private GDP data on Thursday showed the UK growing at a faster rate than other G7 countries, but most of the boost came from government spending, while consumers are still reluctant to splash out. (Join our ETNRI WhatsApp channel for all the latest updates) Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Tariffs, tantrums, and tech: How Trump's trade drama is keeping Indian IT on tenterhooks Good, bad, ugly: How will higher ethanol in petrol play out for you? As big fat Indian wedding slims to budget, Manyavar loses lustre As 50% US tariff looms, 6 key steps that can safeguard Indian economy Stock Radar: JSPL forms Ascending Triangle pattern on weekly charts, could hit fresh 52-week high soon Nifty and business are different species: 5 small-cap stocks from different sectors with upside potential of up to 30% F&O Radar | Deploy Bear Put Spread in Nifty to play index's negative stance amid volatility Wealth creation: Look beyond the obvious in some things; 10 fertilizer sector companies worth watching


Economic Times
3 days ago
- Business
- Economic Times
Cisco projects upbeat quarterly revenue as AI fuels networking equipment demand
Reuters Cisco Systems forecast first-quarter revenue above Wall Street estimates on Wednesday, as the artificial intelligence boom boosted demand for its networking equipment from cloud customers. Hyperscale cloud investments are healthy and driving IT infrastructure financing, which sets up a good backdrop for Cisco. "Within the enterprise spending environment, there is incremental spending to beef up the infrastructure to accommodate AI, so that could potentially be another growth driver, especially with Cisco having such a big presence in the traditional enterprise market," Edward Jones analyst David Heger said. Big tech firms such as Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet are ramping up spending to ease capacity shortages that have limited their ability to meet AI demand, even after several quarters of multi-billion-dollar outlays. Cisco's AI infrastructure orders exceeded $800 million in the fourth quarter, bringing the total for fiscal 2025 to over $2 billion, more than double its original target, CEO Chuck Robbins said on a post-earnings call. The company has not seen any pull-forward in demand for products, but did note a small impact from tariffs in the quarter and during the fiscal year, he added. "We expect the sovereign AI opportunity to build momentum in the second half of fiscal 2026. Cisco will be a core system provider for these significant AI training and inference cluster build outs and integral to their development and eventual hyperscaling." Cisco has partnered with Humain, Saudi Arabia's state-backed AI company, and it will provide digital solutions for Bahrain's government information and telecommunications infrastructure. The company expects revenue to be between $14.65 billion and $14.85 billion for the first quarter, compared with analysts' average estimate of $14.62 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. Its revenue for the fourth quarter ended July 26 came in at $14.67 billion, compared with estimates of $14.62 billion. Networking product orders grew in the double digits during the quarter, driven by webscale infrastructure, switching, enterprise routing, industrial IoT and servers. Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Tariffs, tantrums, and tech: How Trump's trade drama is keeping Indian IT on tenterhooks Good, bad, ugly: How will higher ethanol in petrol play out for you? As big fat Indian wedding slims to budget, Manyavar loses lustre As 50% US tariff looms, 6 key steps that can safeguard Indian economy Stock Radar: JSPL forms Ascending Triangle pattern on weekly charts, could hit fresh 52-week high soon Nifty and business are different species: 5 small-cap stocks from different sectors with upside potential of up to 30% F&O Radar | Deploy Bear Put Spread in Nifty to play index's negative stance amid volatility Wealth creation: Look beyond the obvious in some things; 10 fertilizer sector companies worth watching