Dignity said the 7% year-on-year rise in the number of deaths in England, Scotland and Wales represented a rate of change not seen for over 60 years.
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"This has been an extraordinary year, with the number of deaths changing in percentage terms by a greater amount than any year since 1952," the firm said. "As a result, the group's funeral and cremation volumes were much higher than originally expected."
A spokeswoman said the firm did not know the reason for the increase. She added that the broader trend was that the rate of deaths had been dropping since the 1970s and was forecast to start rising again in the 2020s.
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Dignity said its underlying operating profit for 2015 was $138 million, up 16 percent on the 2014 figure.
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