º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Timeline to collapse: how it all went wrong for South West construction giant Midas

Exeter-headquartered company's demise blamed on Covid, inflation and lost contracts and sealed when bank cancelled overdraft as subcontractors went unpaid

The topping out ceremony at Midas' work on the Valency technology building at Truro and Penwith College, Cornwall, in 2020 - the year Midas began to experience a decline in trade

The fall of South West construction giant Midas is being blamed on the Covid pandemic, inflation, loss of contracts, uncollected debts and ultimately the firm’s inability to pay its subcontractors.

A report by administrators for the stricken Exeter-headquartered company reveals attempts were made to save the business but three offers to buy the floundering firm fell through.

The coup de grâce came when Lloyds Bank pulled Midas’ £5m overdraft facility, pitching the group into administration with debts of more than £22m and the loss of more than 300 jobs.


Like this story? Why not sign up to get the latest South West business news straight to your inbox

Administrators at global business advisory firm Teneo Financial Advisory Ltd have said it is unlikely there will now be any funds to pay the companies’ unsecured creditors.

Midas has been involved in huge and expensive construction projects across the South West at the time of its demise, including three Torbay hotels, worth a combined £40m, Penzance’s £5.8m Creative Cluster and a £50m housing scheme in Swindon.

Teneo - in a report on its proposals for dealing with the administration of Midas Group Ltd and its subsidiaries Midas Construction Ltd, Midas Retail Ltd, Mi-Space (º£½ÇÊÓÆµ) Ltd, Mi-Space Property Services Ltd, Midas Commercial Developments Ltd and Falmouth Developments Ltd - has explained the reasons why a the ninth largest company in the South West went belly up.

Despite turnover of £223,309,000 for the year to the end of October 2021, and a profit of £1.349m, the group’s trading performance waned to such an extent that by early 2022 there was no prospect of selling a solvent business.