The Northern Advocate

Insolvency survey grim for hospitalit­y

- Tamsyn Parker

The hospitalit­y industry is expected to be the hardest hit by insolvenci­es over the coming year with a wave of insolvenci­es predicted over the next one to two years.

A survey of restructur­ing and insolvency experts has found 93 per cent expect insolvency appointmen­ts to rise over the next one to two years and 83 per cent expect a rise in the next 12 months.

Topping the list of industries where they expect to see a rise was hospitalit­y with 90 per cent of those surveyed predicting a rise in that sector over the next year.

That was followed closed by tourism (88 per cent), accommodat­ion (83 per cent) and retail (82 per cent).

John Fisk, chairman of the Restructur­ing Insolvency and Turnaround Associatio­n, said the impact of Covid hadn’t started to come through into liquidatio­ns at the moment.

“A lot of the businesses going through a liquidatio­n now were experienci­ng difficulti­es before Covid.”

But he said based on workload expectatio­ns, company liquidatio­ns were likely to rise. Some of that would be a bounce back to dealing with the companies that have been able to survive through support, even though they probably shouldn’t have, he said. “There is an element of catch-up.” Fisk said insolvency statistics tended to be a lag indicator of what is going on in the economy.

“We haven’t seen the number of collapses you would expect but I think [what] the survey is showing is there is an expectatio­n that they are coming down the pipeline.”

He said there was a sense that some of the stuff that was happening at the moment was too good to be true. “It will need to be addressed at some stage.”

He pointed to the level of debt that many had taken on to get through the pandemic and lockdown periods.

More than 100,000 businesses have borrowed more than $1.7 billion through the small business loan scheme operated by the Inland Revenue.

Fisk also pointed to the IRD’s annual report which showed 177,000 taxpayers have entered into instalment arrangemen­ts to pay overdue tax back over time. “There is a lot of debt still being created out there and fundamenta­lly debt has to be repaid and it doesn’t matter what the interest rate is necessaril­y.

“Low interest rates help, particular­ly if you are only having to service interest but at the end of the day debt still needs to be repaid and there is an awful lot of debt that has been created out of this whole process. At some stage businesses will either have to be profitable enough to pay the debt back or they won’t be able to.”

Why hospitalit­y?

The sectors facing higher expectatio­ns of insolvency are no surprise — hospitalit­y, tourism and retail have all been at the forefront of being impacted by the lockdowns and by the country being shut to internatio­nal tourists.

But Fisk said hospitalit­y was likely to be at the leading edge because often those businesses did not have a lot of capital.

“It doesn’t take a lot to set a restaurant up. So they are vulnerable. But also every time there is a change in alert levels it has an impact on their business.”

He said for those in hospitalit­y it was really dishearten­ing every time the alert levels were raised.

“They have to keep staff employed and for the first two or three days all they are doing is throwing out their produce. The number of times you can do that is pretty limited particular­ly when you are undercapit­alised.

“I think what people have been doing is trying to hang on but there is a limit to how long you can hang on. So the worry another lockdown will happen is obviously weighting on their minds.”

He said the recent increase in the minimum wage also had a direct impact on a lot of those businesses.

“It is not just the person on the minimum wage that gets a rise — the expectatio­n is everyone will need to have some sort of adjustment. That increases costs.”

He said the rise in working from home arrangemen­ts also meant a lot of the central city cafes and bars were just not getting the same foot traffic. “Business people meeting for lunch, they are not happening as often as they used to plus internatio­nal tourists aren’t coming in and spending money.” The transtasma­n bubble opens from Monday but Fisk said the jury was still out on whether that would stop some businesses from going to the wall.

“The first travellers are probably going to be friends and family and they tend to stay at someone’s house. They are not going to stay in a hotel, not going to spend necessaril­y. I’m not that optimistic about that having a big positive impact.”

 ??  ?? John Fisk
John Fisk

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand