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Enterprise

Number of firms in distress soars amid ‘debt storm’ worries

Latest Red Flag alert found 47,477 firms were in critical financial distress

Rising energy costs have hit companies hard(Image: Peter Byrne/PA Wire)

The number of firms on the brink of collapse jumped by more than a quarter at the end of 2023 as fears grow over a “debt storm” caused by the recent barrage of interest rate rises, a report has warned.

The latest Red Flag Alert report from insolvency specialist Begbies Traynor found that 47,477 firms were in critical financial distress in the final three months of last year.

That was up 25.9% on the previous three months and marked the second quarter in a row where critical financial distress had grown by about a quarter.

Begbies also said that 539,900 º£½ÇÊÓÆµ businesses were deemed to be in “significant” financial distress in the quarter, up 12.9% on the previous three months and 5.6% higher year on year.

Its report showed that all of the 22 sectors assessed saw an increase in critical financial distress.

The construction and real estate sectors were among the hardest hit, with increases of 32.6% and 24.7% respectively, as the onslaught of interest rate rises over the past two years has affected the housing market.

“Serious concerns grow over the construction and real estate sectors, which still represent nearly 30% of all businesses in critical financial distress,” according to Begbies.

The report lays bare the impact of high costs, interest rate increases and consumer spending woes in 2023, which has taken its toll on º£½ÇÊÓÆµ companies.