Company insolvencies soar by 40% compared with same period last year

Company insolvencies soar by 40 per cent over same period last year as firms are hit by climbing costs, labour shortages and higher interest rates

  • Insolvencies jumped 40% in latest quarter compared with same period last year
  • Some 5,595 firms registered for insolvency over the three months to September
  • Comes as businesses face rising costs, higher interest rates and staff shortages

Company insolvencies in England and Wales jumped by 40 per cent between July and September when compared with the same period the year before.

It comes as firms grapple with soaring costs, higher interest rates and labour shortages amid the cost-of-living crisis. 

Official data from the Insolvency Service showed there were 5,595 registered company insolvencies over the three months to September 30.

It was marginally lower than the previous quarter but reflected a 40 per cent jump against the same quarter of 2021.

The Insolvency Service said the figures comprised of 4,800 creditors’ voluntary liquidations (CVLs), 492 compulsory liquidations, 274 administrations and 29 company voluntary arrangements (CVAs).

The Insolvency Service is part of the Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy in central London (pictured)

Compulsory liquidations bounced to their highest levels since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Experts warned that the number of companies entering insolvency processes could worsen in the coming months as inflation continues to bite.

Christina Fitzgerald, president of insolvency and restructuring trade body R3, said: “Two years of economic turbulence are translating into a rise in corporate insolvencies.

“Government support paused rather than prevented the economic effects of the pandemic from leading to more businesses entering insolvency processes, but now that support has ended, we’re starting to see numbers exceed pre-pandemic ones.

“It seems inevitable that numbers will increase in the coming months as the state of the economy, increased costs, and people’s reluctance to spend money because of the cost of living deals a further blow to those businesses that have struggled since the beginning of the pandemic.”

Nicola Banham, insolvency director at Azets, added: “This pressure will continue to build as companies face ever-increasing costs at a time of prolonged economic uncertainty.

“Alongside this, the cost of servicing debt is rising due to increasing interest rates, which are expected to continue to rise and further exacerbate matters.”

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