Published on 28 Jun 2016
Shares
of ADP are up 2.5% thus far in 2016, far better than the 1% drop in the
S&P 500. The payroll provider has outperformed the index over the
last two, five and ten year periods as well. Jan Siegmund, CFO of ADP,
said the job expansion of the past few years provides a nice tailwind,
but is not the sole basis for the company's success. 'Our clients are
growing and that helps us in our revenue growth,' said Siegmund. 'Not
much as one would think as only 1% of our 9% organic revenue growth is
driven by the growth of our clients, but our clients have enjoyed job
growth of 2% to 3% in the last few years.' ADP pays more than 24 million
people in the U.S., or 1 in 6 workers. ADP has distributed the ADP
National Employment Report (NER) free for the last decade. As opposed to
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) employment reports, ADP said
its accuracy centers on the fact that its report is based on actual
payroll data, not survey data. The BLS counts employees 'when they are
paid' while ADP counts employees 'listed as active on an employer's
payroll.' 'In some months we are spot-on and in other months we differ
slightly, but overall the difference is nominal and shows the NER is an
accurate,' said Siegmund. During the last 10 years, ADP has reported
that the share of manufacturing jobs has declined from 12% to 10%.
Regionally, job growth has shifted away from the Northeast and Midwest
to the South and West, according to ADP. Furthermore, small companies
with fewer than 50 employees that survived the recession have fared
better in the labor market than companies employing 500 people or more.
Siegmund said it has taken 10 years for the labor market to attain full
employment again. Over the last five years, average monthly job growth
has been just about 200,000. Also, ADP said there is evidence that wage
growth is picking up as the economy gets close to full employment. The
tech and information sector has thriving workforces, but overall
employment growth within the sector was flat last quarter. As a result,
these workers were able to exploit this and managers were forced to
compete for a limited number of workers.
http://www.4-traders.com/AUTOMATIC-DATA-PROCESSING-11713/
http://www.4-traders.com/AUTOMATIC-DATA-PROCESSING-11713/