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COMPANY INSOLVENCIES
There were 4,001 compulsory liquidations and creditors’
voluntary liquidations in total in England and Wales in the
third quarter of 2008 (on a seasonally adjusted basis). This
was an increase of 10.5% on the previous quarter and an increase
of 26.3% on the same period a year ago.
This was
made up of 1,483 compulsory liquidations (which are up 10.9% on
the previous quarter and 16.1% on the corresponding quarter of
the previous year), and 2,518 creditors voluntary liquidations
(which are up 10.2% on the previous quarter and 33.2% on the
corresponding quarter of the previous year).

In the twelve
months ending Q3 2008, 0.6% of active companies went into
liquidation, the same as the previous quarter and the
corresponding quarter of 2007.
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Table I. Company Liquidations in England and Wales (seasonally
adjusted)
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
% change
– Q3 2008 on |
|
|
|
Q3 2007 |
Q4 2007 |
Q1 2008 |
Q2 2008 r |
Q3 2008 p |
Q3 2007 |
Q2 2008 |
|
Company
Liquidations |
3,167 |
3,039 |
3,189 |
3,622 |
4,001 |
26.3 |
10.5 |
|
of which: |
Compulsory |
1,277 |
1,162 |
1,106 |
1,337 |
1,483 |
16.1 |
10.9 |
|
|
Creditors
Voluntary2 |
1,890 |
1,877 |
2,084 |
2,285 |
2,518 |
33.2 |
10.2 |
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Source: Insolvency Service and Companies House
p =
provisional, r = revised
1 Longer series back to 1998 are presented in the
accompanying detailed tables.
2 Where the CVL is the first insolvency procedure
entered into (see Notes to Editors). |
Additionally, there were 1,444 other corporate insolvencies in
the third quarter of 2008 (not seasonally adjusted) comprising
270 receiverships, 1,007 administrations and 167 company
voluntary arrangements. In total these represented an increase
of 64.7% on the same period a year ago.
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Table II. Other Corporate Insolvencies in England and Wales (not
seasonally adjusted)
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
% change
– Q3 2008 on |
|
|
|
Q3 2007 |
Q4 2007 |
Q1 2008 |
Q2 2008 |
Q3 2008 p |
Q3 2007 |
|
Receiverships2 |
80 |
92 |
159 |
177 |
270 |
237.5 |
|
Administrations3 |
668 |
575 |
859 |
938 |
1,007 |
50.7 |
|
Company
voluntary arrangements |
129 |
91 |
140 |
131 |
167 |
29.5 |
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Source: Companies House
p =
provisional, r = revised
1 Longer series back to 1998 are presented in the
accompanying detailed tables.
2 Includes Law of Property Act receivers (see
“Notes to Editors” paragraph 9).
3
Includes Administrator Appointments.
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Note: The figures in Table II are not seasonally adjusted and
are not, therefore, on the same basis as the headline figures in
Table I. The accompanying detailed tables also include the
non-seasonally adjusted series for corporate liquidations.
INDIVIDUAL INSOLVENCIES
There were 27,087 individual insolvencies in England and
Wales in the third quarter of 2008 on a seasonally adjusted
basis. This was an increase of 8.8% on the previous quarter and
an increase of 4.6% on the same period a year ago.
This was made up of 17,341 bankruptcies (which were up
12.1% on the previous quarter and 9.5% on the corresponding
quarter of the previous year), and 9,746 Individual Voluntary
Arrangements (IVAs), (which were up 3.3% on the previous quarter
but down 3.1% on the corresponding quarter of the previous
year).

For bankruptcy orders there has been a pronounced shift
towards debtor’s petition bankruptcies and away from
creditor’s petitions in recent years. In the third quarter of
2008, 83.4% were made on the petition of the debtor, a similar
level to that seen for 2006 and 2007 as a whole.
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Table III. Individual Insolvencies in England and Wales (seasonally
adjusted) 1 |
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
%
change – Q3 2008 on |
|
|
|
Q3 2007 |
Q4 2007 |
Q1 2008 |
Q2 2008
r |
Q3 2008
p |
Q3 2007 |
Q2 2008 |
|
Individuals |
25,900 |
24,854 |
25,054 |
24,893 |
27,087 |
4.6 |
8.8 |
|
of
which: |
Bankruptcies |
15,842 |
15,636 |
15,492 |
15,463 |
17,341 |
9.5 |
12.1 |
|
|
IVAs |
10,058 |
9,218 |
9,562 |
9,430 |
9,746 |
-3.1 |
3.3 |
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Source:
Insolvency Service
p = provisional, r = revised
1 Longer series back to 1998 are presented in the accompanying
detailed tables
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The percentage of bankruptcy orders involving trading debts
(self-employed bankruptcies) has fallen from 70% in 1990 (the
earliest for which reliable figures exist) to 11.2% in the
second quarter of 2008 (third quarter 2008 figures for
trading-related bankruptcies are not yet available). It should
be noted, however, that figures for 2007 onwards are based on
a revised classification and are not entirely consistent with
earlier years figures.
INSOLVENCIES IN SCOTLAND AND NORTHERN IRELAND
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Table IV. Insolvencies in Scotland (not seasonally adjusted) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
%
change – Q3 2008 on |
|
|
|
Q3 2007 |
Q4 2007 |
Q1 2008 |
Q2 2008 |
Q3 2008
p |
Q3 2007 |
|
Company
Liquidations |
125 |
83 |
102 |
132 |
127 |
1.6 |
|
of
which: |
Compulsory |
105 |
71 |
95 |
111 |
111 |
5.7 |
|
|
Creditors Voluntary |
20 |
12 |
7 |
21 |
16 |
-20.0 |
|
Individuals1 |
3,527 |
3,318 |
3,324 r |
4,735 |
5,998 |
70.1 |
|
of
which: |
Sequestrations1 |
1,545 |
1,563 |
1,444 r |
2,853 |
4,055 |
162.5 |
|
|
Protected Trust Deeds |
1,982 |
1,755 |
1,880 |
1,882 |
1,943 |
-2.0 |
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Source: Companies House (Scotland) and Accountant in
Bankruptcy (AiB)
p =
provisional, r = revised
1
The sequestration figures for 2008 Q2 onwards include
LILAs (Low Income, Low Assets) cases. These were
introduced as a new route into bankruptcy under
the Bankruptcy and Diligence etc (Scotland) Act 2007, wef
1 April 2008.
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Table V. Insolvencies in Northern Ireland (not seasonally adjusted) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
%
change – Q3 2008 on |
|
|
|
Q3 2007 |
Q4 2007 |
Q1 2008 |
Q2 2008 |
Q3 2008
p |
Q3 2007 |
|
Company
Liquidations |
42 |
48 |
42 |
57 |
44 |
4.8 |
|
of
which |
Compulsory |
28 |
36 |
37 |
42 |
27 |
-3.6 |
|
|
Creditors Voluntary |
14 |
12 |
5 |
15 |
17 |
21.4 |
|
Individuals |
338 |
319 |
330 |
479 |
386 |
14.2 |
|
of
which: |
Bankruptcies |
227 |
225 |
226 |
331 |
229 |
0.9 |
|
|
IVAs |
111 |
94 |
104 |
148 |
157 |
41.4 |
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Source: Department for Enterprise, Trade and Investment,
Northern Ireland (DETINI)
p =
provisional, r = revised
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Notes to
Editors
1.
The official Insolvency Statistics are the
most comprehensive record of the number of corporate and
individual insolvencies in England and Wales. Insolvencies in
Scotland and Northern Ireland are also included, but are shown
separately as they are covered by separate legislation, there
are some differences in definition, and policy responsibility
for them lies within the devolved administrations.
2.
The statistics for England and Wales are
derived from administrative records of the department for
Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BIS), Insolvency
Service and Companies House Executive Agencies.
For Scotland, the company insolvency statistics are derived from
administrative records at Companies House, Scotland. Figures for
individual insolvencies in Scotland are sourced from the Office
of the Accountant in Bankruptcy (AIB).
The
Northern Ireland statistics are derived from administrative
records of the DETI Insolvency Service and Companies Registry.
Generally speaking, numbers of cases are based on the date the
insolvency procedure was registered on the administrative
recording system, not on the date of the order or agreement.
3.
Numbers of insolvencies are not directly
comparable with official estimates of business stock, formations
or closures. Statistics of business start-ups and closures that
are directly comparable with each other have been assembled from
VAT records and are published by BIS. The latest figures are
those for 2006, and were issued in a BIS press notice on 14
November 2007. More detailed figures are available via the
on-line database NOMIS. Additionally, analysis into the number
of firms in the United Kingdom estimated the total number of
businesses at the start of 2007 at 4.7 million.
4.
The X12ARIMA program (developed by Statistics
Canada) is used for the seasonal adjustment of the insolvency
statistics for England and Wales, this being the recommended
program within UK National Statistics. Seasonal adjustment is a
process by which changes that are due to seasonal or other
calendar influences are removed to produce a clearer picture of
the underlying behaviour of the data series. The data series
covering Scotland and Northern Ireland do not demonstrate
consistent seasonality and only the raw (unadjusted) series are
presented.
5.
Insolvent companies entering liquidation in
England & Wales and Scotland are dealt with under the Insolvency
Act of 1986 and, in Northern Ireland, by the Insolvency
(Northern Ireland) Order 1989. They can either be the
subject of a compulsory liquidation (winding-up) order
obtained from the court by a creditor, shareholder or director
or themselves pass a resolution, subject to the approval
of a creditors' meeting that the company be wound up voluntarily
(creditors voluntary liquidations, registered at
Companies House/Companies Registry). In either case they are
said to have been wound-up, and numbers are given in
Tables 1, 4 and 6. A third type of winding-up, members'
voluntary liquidation, is not included because it does not
involve insolvency.
6.
The Insolvency Act 1986 and, in Northern
Ireland, the Insolvency (Northern Ireland) Order 1989 also
introduced the procedures of company administration orders
and company voluntary arrangements (CVAs). The
administration procedure gives a period of time during which
creditors are restrained from taking action and a court
appointed administrator puts forward proposals to deal with the
company’s financial difficulties. The CVA procedure aids
business by enabling a company in financial difficulty to come
to a binding agreement with its creditors. These are listed
separately under Table 3 for England and Wales and Table 5 for
Scotland.
7.
The Enterprise Act 2002 introduced revisions
to the corporate administration procedures, replacing Part II of
the Insolvency Act 1986 with Schedule B1. These include the
introduction of additional entry routes into administration that
do not require the making of an administration order and a
streamlined process for Administrations whereby a company
can in some circumstances be dissolved without recourse to
liquidation. The primary objective of administration (and of
CVAs) is the rescue of the company as a going concern. These
provisions came into force on 15th September 2003 and
Administrations under the Enterprise Act have been
included on Tables 3 and 5 from Q3 2003 (dissolution follows 3
months after a notice is filed with the Registrar of Companies,
if no objections are raised by the court). On 27th March 2006
the Insolvency (Northern Ireland) Order 2005 introduced similar
revisions to the corporate administration procedures in Northern
Ireland, replacing Part III of the Insolvency (Northern Ireland)
Order 1989 with Schedule B1.
8. Since the Enterprise Act 2002, a number of
these streamlined administrations have subsequently converted to
a creditors’ voluntary liquidation. These liquidations in
England and Wales are not included under the headline figures
here or at Table 1, as they do not represent a new company
entering into an insolvency procedure for the first time. For
completeness, however, they are included under Table 3d. It is
also possible for the outcome of an administration to be entry
into a company voluntary arrangement or a compulsory
liquidation, but these cases are not separately identifiable
from Companies House’ information and will therefore be included
within the new case figures for these procedures (the numbers
involved are relatively few, compared to those entering CVL).
9.
Receivership appointments
comprise administrative receivers appointed under the
1986 Insolvency Act (and the 1989 Order for Northern Ireland)
and certain other receiver appointments, for example under
the Law of Property Act 1925 - due to the use of the same
statutory documentation for different types of receivership, it
is not possible to give a breakdown between them. Law of
Property Act receivers are classed as Enforcement of Security
and are not insolvency procedures under the Insolvency Act of
1986. For this reason levels of, and trends in, receivership
appointments should be interpreted with caution. The provisions
of the Enterprise Act 2002 [section 250] (Insolvency [Northern
Ireland] Order 2005 [Article 5]) have made some changes to the
procedures for administrative receivership.
10.
Figures sourced from Companies House (E&W)
were revised previously (where appropriate) between 2007 Q1 and
2008 Q1. This reflected inaccuracies identified in the counting
of cases during validation following the move to a new IT system
in February 2008. The most noticeable revisions were to
receiverships (where some companies had been counted more than
once); the rest of this series prior to 2007 is not yet
available on a revised basis. However, it should also be noted
that because the revised counts have been run against a live
database, they do not exactly reflect the original numbers of
new cases that would have been reported.
11.
Individual insolvencies in England and Wales
and in Northern Ireland are made up of bankruptcy orders
and individual voluntary arrangements (IVAs).
Insolvent individuals in England and Wales are dealt with mainly
under the Insolvency Act 1986. A bankruptcy order is made on the
petition of the debtor or one or more of his creditors when the
court is satisfied that there is no prospect of the debt being
paid. (Figures for bankruptcy orders include orders relating to
the estates of deceased debtors). There are also individual
voluntary arrangements (IVAs) and deeds of arrangement (the
latter under the Deeds of Arrangement Act 1914), which enable
debtors to come to an agreement with their creditors. Table 2
summarises the above procedures for England and Wales (IVAs and
Deeds of Arrangement are included under a single column) and
Table 2a provides bankruptcy orders further split by petition
type. Changes to bankruptcy law in England and Wales introduced
by the Enterprise Act 2002 came into force on 1 April 2004 – the
Act made no changes to the existing individual voluntary
arrangement regime.
12.
Table 2b records numbers of Income Payments
Orders (IPOs) and Income Payments Agreements (IPAs) where the
bankrupt makes regular payments from surplus income towards
his/her debts for a period of time, either by court order or by
agreement. The figures record numbers of IPOs/IPAs made in each
period, they do not, in general, relate to the date of the
original bankruptcy order. Table 2b records a number of IPAs
before Q2 2004 because the
IPA provisions of the Enterprise Act 2002 (commenced on 1 April
2004) were applicable, upon commencement, to pre-commencement
bankruptcies.
13.
Insolvent individuals in Scotland (Table 4)
are subject to sequestration (bankruptcy) or protected
trust deeds under the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985 (as
amended). This Act was amended by the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act
1993. On April 1 2008 the Bankruptcy and Diligence etc.
(Scotland) Act 2007 came into force making significant changes
to some aspects of bankruptcy, debt relief and debt enforcement
in Scotland. Most notably, as far as these statistics are
concerned, it introduced a new route into bankruptcy for people
with low income and low assets (LILA). The sequestration figures
for Q2 2008 onwards include these new LILA cases; therefore
trends in numbers of sequestrations before and after this date
should be interpreted with care. Protected trust deeds are
voluntary arrangements in Scotland, but although they fulfil
much the same role as individual voluntary arrangements, there
are important differences in the way they are set up and
administered. Details of both sequestrations and protected trust
deeds are found on the register of insolvencies, which is
maintained by the Accountant in Bankruptcy. Further information
about insolvency in Scotland can be found on the Accountant's
website at
www.aib.gov.uk. It should also be noted that from April
2008, personal insolvency statistics have been extracted from
information published on the AIB website; whereas previously it
was supplied on request, tailored to our publication
requirements.
14.
Insolvent individuals in Northern Ireland are
dealt with under the Insolvency (Northern Ireland) Order 1989
and are recorded under Table 6. On 27 March 2006 the Insolvency
(Northern Ireland) Order 2005 came into operation and
implemented similar changes to bankruptcy procedures as the
Enterprise Act 2002 introduced in England and Wales. Further
information about insolvency in Northern Ireland can be found on
their website at
www.insolvencyservice.detini.gov.uk.
15.
Under the Insolvency Act 1986 and the
Insolvent Partnerships Order and, in Northern Ireland, the
Insolvency (Northern Ireland) Order 1989 and the Insolvent
Partnerships Order (Northern Ireland) 1995, insolvent
partnerships may be wound up as an unregistered company or
administered following bankruptcy orders against the
partners. Insolvent Partnerships can also enter administration
or a voluntary arrangement.
16.
Company insolvencies and bankruptcy orders
(relating to the self-employed) in England and Wales broken down
by industry are available from Q3 2007 according to the Standard
Industrial Classification (SIC) 2003, bringing them into line
with other official statistics. Industry breakdowns for
compulsory liquidations and bankruptcies (only) are only
available one quarter in arrears of the headline series. Figures
according to the previously used Insolvency Trade Classification
(ITC) are available up to Q3 2006, but information by industry
is not available for the period between Q4 2006 to Q2 2007
(inclusive) on either classification. Additionally, the broad
split of bankruptcy orders into self-employed and other
individuals is available under Table 2a.
17.
Company liquidations in Scotland are
available from Q1 2007 based on the SIC2003 industry breakdown
and these can be found in Tables 4a and 4b. Earlier data are
available separately classified according to the Insolvency
Trade Classification (ITC).
Information concerning insolvency legislation, policy evaluation
and research in England and Wales may be obtained from the
Insolvency Service website at
www.insolvency.gov.uk.
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