Finance director says staffing levels will now remain ’broadly flat’ after profit rises by two-thirds

The latest wave of redundancies at Hyder will be the last, the engineer has insisted, after profits soared by more than two-thirds over the past six months.

In results for the six months to 30 September, the company announced it had shed about 300 jobs in the UK and Middle East - 7% of the firm’s workforce - after losing 500 the year before.

Russell Down, group finance director, said that staff levels over the next year would stay β€œbroadly flat”.

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The firm shed about 130 jobs in the UK and 160 in the Middle East. Jobs in the UK had been cut because of a smaller workload and a focus on profitable areas.

Down said UK staffing levels were broadly right, but the highways part of the business could shrink in numbers.

He said: β€œIn the UK we are growing in water and in rail. We are not going to say we always have to have 500 people working on highways. We have a substantial number of highways projects. [But] is it a growth area now? No, it’s not.”

Despite Β£1.8m in redundancy costs, profit shot up to Β£9.5m, from Β£5.7m in the same six months last year.

Revenue suffered a slight dip, declining from Β£156.3m to Β£149.9m, with turnover in the UK and Germany steady. It fell dramatically in the Middle East, but expanded in Asia Pacific.

β€œAbu Dhabi has a bit of a cash issue after bailing out Dubai,” Down said, and added that the company was owed about Β£8m in Dubai, approximately Β£1.4m less than in February.

Down dismissed any suggestion that Hyder would be acquired over the next year. β€œWe are very clear that we don’t see the need to be part of a bigger US player,” he said.

β€œWe are an international player with an international culture. URS [the American firm that acquired UK engineer Scott Wilson in September] are a US firm with a US culture.”

He said that there had been β€œno talks” with potential buyers.