UK transport sector hit by upsurge in bad debt, new research reveals.

28 July, 17

The UK’s Transport sector was hit by a huge increase in bad debts owed to it during Q2 2017, with unrecoverable debt rising by 178% from £2.6m to £7.4m. The average amount of each debt also spiralled, rising from nearly £7,800 to over £19,000. At the same time, however, debts owed by the sector to suppliers also mushroomed, growing by 161% from £13.3m to £34.8m.

The figures have been released today in the Creditsafe Watchdog Report, which tracks quarterly economic developments across the Transport sector in addition to 11 other sectors (Farming & Agriculture, Construction, Banking & Financial, Hospitality, IT, Manufacturing, Professional Services, Retail, Sports & Entertainment, Utilities, Wholesale).

 The growing bad debt problem in both directions came despite the sector having a strong quarter in terms of sales. Revenue grew by 4.1% to £201.4bn between April and June. Of the four industries analysed by the Creditsafe Watchdog Report, Construction and Manufacturing saw falls while Retail was virtually unchanged.

 Other positive aspects for the transport & logistics industry were a 11% drop in the number of business failures (falling from 133 to 119) and a drop of over 40% in companies having a CCJ against them (down from 1,471 to 843).

Rachel Mainwaring, Operations Director at Creditsafe, commented: “It is concerning to see such large rises in bad debt in the transport sector. Whilst the amount of bad debt owed to the sector is lower in real terms than some other sectors like construction, nevertheless to see such a spike raises questions about credit health. The almost equally large rise in bad debt owed by the sector is not encouraging either. In what remains a challenging economic climate, effective cash management is essential to protect margins. It’s something the sector will want to monitor its performance on closely in the coming months.”

 

ENDS

Notes to Editors:

Creditsafe calculated total sales by using the Q2 total value of filed revenue from active limited companies that are required to file this profit and loss to date. Creditsafe captures bad debt information based on the information within a ‘Statement of Affairs’ when a company enters liquidation. A Statement of Affairs is a document detailing a company’s assets and liabilities. Generally prepared by a liquidator or appointed professional during certain insolvency proceedings, the document is later registered at Companies House.

For further information on the methodology behind the figures, please see the full report here: [link]

Table 1: Creditsafe Watchdog Report – Q2 Figures

Construction Manufacturing Retail Transport
Total Sales £306,084,731,797 £649,823,849,497 £418,597,666,550 £201,485,859,141
Number of Active Companies 357,886 174,363 177,619 104,423
Number of New Companies 13,859 4,935 8,180 5,537
Number of Failures 710 465 261 119
Total Employment 899,541 2,870,283 2,755,133 1,203,800
Bad debt: Owed to the sector £15,784,684 £15,684,564 £3,369,860 £7,350,018
Bad debt: Owed by the sector £94,220,742 £28,707,006 £17,223,924 £34,820,125

 

Related posts

6 February, 24
Warburtons, Britain’s largest bakery brand, has chosen Tiger Trailers to provide 38 rigid box vans to join its nationwide fleet of vehicles delivering fresh bread to 18,500 stores across the country every day.
Advertisement
TK23-022-Banner-AxlePower-1400x1200

Latest posts

27 March, 24
Parksafe Group, the vehicle safety specialist, has entered into a fleet technology partnership with Queclink Wireless Solutions to develop industry-leading telematics and connectivity systems.