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PRIVACY
Enterprise

Corporate insolvencies rise 70% in South West as inflation bites

Supply chain issues and loss of Government Covid support also cited as reasons firms are going insolvent

There has been a rise in corporate insolvencies in the South West

The number of corporate insolvencies seen across the South West rose by 70% in the third quarter of 2021 as inflation and supply-chain pressures started to bite and Government Covid-19 support measures began to unwind, new statistics show.

Analysis of notices in The Gazette by Interpath Advisory reveals that a total of 17 companies fell into administration or receivership from July to September 2021 – up from 10 in Q2 2021, though down from the 25 seen during the same period last year.

This mirrors the national picture, which saw º£½ÇÊÓÆµ administrations and receiverships increase by 26% in the third quarter of 2021 - from 123 in Q2 2021 to 155 in Q3, albeit this was significantly down from the 243 appointments during the comparative period in 2020, and still at only 39% of pre-Covid levels when compared to the 401 appointments in Q3 2019.

Sarah Collins, managing director at Interpath Advisory, said: “With inflation on the rise, Covid-19 support measures, including the Job Retention Scheme, now tailing off, and well-publicised issues affecting global supply chains and availability of labour, it’s perhaps unsurprising that we are starting to see a modest rise in insolvency levels as we enter the final quarter of the year.”

Nationally, the construction and energy sectors saw the largest rise in levels of administrations and receiverships in Q3 2021, with three times as many filings for insolvency in the energy sector (nine appointments) and twice as many filings in the construction sector (34 appointments) compared to the previous quarter.

Ms Collins said: “It’s been a particularly challenging quarter for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s energy sector, which is reeling from the recent spikes in wholesale gas, coal and electricity prices to unprecedented highs.

“Not only has this had an impact on energy-intensive industries such as manufacturing, but it’s also left the domestic energy supply market in disarray with 13 retail suppliers entering into a SOLR (supplier of last resort) process in the past eight weeks alone, impacting over two million customers who have been switched to new providers.

“The reality is that with the price cap restricting the ability of companies to pass increasing input costs onto consumers, there is little room for manoeuvre for those smaller suppliers which don’t have the financial bandwidth to absorb the higher price, leaving many with little option but to enter an insolvency process.