Australian corporate insolvencies have reached their worst point in recent history, with more than 900 businesses collapsing into external administration during June.
The data confirms what many small businesses already know to be true, that companies in the retail, construction and mining industries are particularly vulnerable to collapse as the economy continues to struggle in key areas.
According to the latest statistics from the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, 5321 companies have entered external administration during 2013 โ a record for the first six months of the year since recording began in 1999.
According to FTI Consulting Group, the June result was more than in 2012, but lower than 2011, and comes after 974 businesses entered external administration in May.
โWe continue to witness a lack of confidence, low finance availability, and a general risk adverse attitude across the economy,โ the report says, citing the key pressures affecting small businesses.
But economic conditions arenโt the only condition affecting small business โ the FTI Report cites the federal election as a key factor, saying it expects businesses to โremain in a holding pattern while waiting the certainty of an outcomeโ.
This isnโt a new excuse. Retail group Noni B announced this week its poor performance was partly due to the uncertainty surrounding the election, and its impact on consumer behaviour.
However, as the FTI report shows, specific industries are hurting. The resources market is facing โongoing pressureโ, while building approvals and manufacturing activities are falling.
โThe outlook for those companies servicing the mining sector remains challenging as miners increasingly focus on managing costs and significant capital expenditure stagnates,โ it says.
The report comes after figures from earlier this month showed insolvency appointments during the first 11 months of the year reached 14,452, up by 183 from the same period in the previous financial year.
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