Rising cost of labour and materials, contractors tied to fixed-price jobs and end of covid support all blamed for hike
The industry has been warned to expect more firms to go bust after the latest official figures showed the number of contractors going under has gone up by a quarter.
Data from the Insolvency Service said the amount of firms in the industry failing had risen 25% between October and November last year, with 325 businesses going bust during the period.
The figure accounted for 19% of the 1,678 firms which collapsed across all industries in the four-week period.
黑洞社区 firms made up a third of construction鈥檚 casualties with more than half coming from the specialist trades such as demolition and enabling contractors. Less than 10% were from civil engineering.
The figures have prompted concerns that numbers will increase this year as firms struggle to cope with rising inflation on labour and materials, having been lumbered with contracts agreed at fixed prices several years ago.
John Bell, senior partner at Clarke Bell Insolvency Practitioners in Manchester, said: 鈥淭he sector is being hit by numerous issues including rising raw material prices, supply chain disruptions, historic debts built up during the pandemic, labour shortages and being tied to fixed-price contracts while the rate of inflation is rising.
鈥淚t is the combination of these difficult factors that is leading to so many construction companies going insolvent and being liquidated.鈥
In its latest report on profit warnings, accountant EY Parthenon yesterday (Sunday) said the number of firms across all industries being forced to issue profit warnings had gone up to 70 in the final quarter of last year 鈥 a rise of 19% on the same period in 2020.
And Ian Marson, the head of its construction business, said he expected a spike in the number of construction firms beginning to struggle to start rising in the spring.
鈥淚 think it will continue to escalate,鈥 he warned, adding that smaller and medium-sized firms, who had eaten into cash reserves to get through the pandemic, most likely to struggle to meet rising materials and labour costs.
Arcadis鈥檚 head of strategic research, Simon Rawlinson, said the latest insolvency figures 鈥渢ells us more about the withdrawal of business support associated with covid rather than the immediate state of the construction sector鈥.
He added: 鈥淏usiness protection measures introduced in May 2020 included six insolvency measures to give companies breathing space to organise a corporate rescue. These measures were withdrawn at the end of September 2021, so the November 2021 data will be the first opportunity to assess the post-covid health of the sector.鈥
But he admitted he expected the 鈥渓evel of insolvencies will continue to grow as businesses struggle with current market conditions and covid-related debt鈥.
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