Eleanor Temple chair of trade body R3
Eleanor Temple, Yorkshire chair of trade body R3

Member Article

R3 responds to October insolvency statistics

Corporate insolvencies decreased to 856 in October 2020 compared to September’s figure of 925, and remained well below October 2019’s figure of 1,485.

Personal insolvencies increased to 11,939 in October 2020 compared to September’s figure of 7,458, and were higher than October 2019’s figure of 10,030.

Eleanor Temple, chair of the insolvency and restructuring trade body R3 in Yorkshire and a barrister at Kings Chambers in Leeds, responds to today’s publication of October’s Corporate and Personal insolvency statistics for England and Wales:

“Corporate insolvency numbers in October were slightly down on September, and – as has been the pattern since the onset of the pandemic – sharply down on the same month in 2019. Month on month, all types of corporate insolvency procedure were lower in October than in September, except for compulsory liquidations, which saw a small rise – albeit from a low base.

“Personal insolvency numbers, meanwhile, were higher in October 2020 than in the same month in 2019, almost entirely due to a notable increase in Individual Voluntary Arrangements, which were around half again as many as in October 2019, and nearly double the number from September 2020. Bankruptcies and Debt Relief Orders rose modestly in number compared with September, but were around a third lower compared with October 2019.

“The continued low levels of corporate insolvency can once again be traced back to high levels of Government support and widespread creditor forbearance, both compelled and voluntary. With many creditors at present prevented by law from taking enforcement action, the usual triggers for seeking advice on dealing with an urgent debt problem are largely absent.

“October was yet another difficult month for many companies and individuals, with local lockdowns coming into operation in different areas in England, and with Wales entering a ‘firebreak’ lockdown later in the month, before the announcement about a new national lockdown in England was made on Halloween.

“Even with the announcement that furlough will be extended until the end of March, job losses are mounting, and many people are entering the run-up to the festive season in a precarious financial position. The FCA found that around 12 million people in the UK currently have low financial resilience, where just one adverse life event can be enough to turn ‘just about managing’ into an immediate crisis situation.

“With constraints on usual levels of pre-Christmas spending, in sectors from bricks-and-mortar retail to hospitality, there is a danger that reduced consumer outlay, exacerbated by personal financial uncertainty, leads to more pain for businesses, who will then be forced to consider more redundancies, in a vicious circle effect.

“With corporate insolvency numbers still far below their pre-pandemic levels, worries are mounting within the profession that a wave of business closures could be on the horizon, made up of both companies which would have become insolvent in the normal scheme of things, along with those businesses dealt a fatal blow by the pandemic.

“Gravity cannot be defied forever, and – with temporary measures stopping creditor enforcement actions against debtors due to expire at the end of the year – the first few months of 2021 could turn out to be difficult ones for large swathes of businesses which have built up arrears with landlords, suppliers, or the taxman.

“Directors of companies whose profits have been affected by the pandemic, but who have continued to pay themselves dividends at the same level as last year, need to tread carefully. If their company enters an insolvency procedure, the insolvency practitioner handling the case will be entitled to look at whether any dividends were justified – and if not, they could pursue directors for repayment.

“Debt problems can quickly turn from a snowball to an avalanche. The importance of speaking to a qualified and regulated advisor at the first signs of trouble cannot be overstated, to help individuals or business owners find a way back to financial stability.”

This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Emma Kilmurray .

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