This year has been the bleakest for business in generations. Not just because of Covid-19 but because the cure has been worse than the disease. The four UK Governments have made serious mistakes in the handling of the pandemic by consistently penalising small businesses, retailing, hospitality, the travel and leisure industries as well as sole traders and the self-employed.
This is not a political matter as the four UK Governments represent all parts of the political spectrum but all have one thing in common and that is a dictatorial tendency that has led to a recession, high unemployment and mass business failures.
ICSM Credit stands with virtually all businesses in this country in its desire to get Britain back to work and to end the slide into a depression as quickly as possible – starting now.
ICSM Credit's Back to Business Manifesto
1 End the tier system now and give the powers to local parish, town, city, district, unitary and county councils and city mayors to introduce any social restrictions required to suppress the virus but excluding business.
2 Allow all businesses to open immediately with sensible precautions to stem the virus put in place.
3 A package of measures to rekindle the high street and shopping areas back into life including slashing business rates, cutting VAT, business rents and adjusting parking restrictions in town centres together with free parking in all shopping centres.
4 To put on hold the Brexit withdrawal agreement for six months to allow businesses more time to prepare for the new arrangements over how it will affect imports and exports.
5 Introduce a tailored rescue package for the most affected industries. For instance, cutting taxes for the hospitality, holiday and travel businesses. Grants for manufacturing to expand and take on new employees. To ensure retailers going into administration are kept on life support to allow time to redirect the businesses to prevent job losses and retain footfall in the high street.
I commend this manifesto to all our members and to the business community and Government as a whole.
Wishing you a Merry Christmas and hopefully a busy and prosperous New Year.
Best wishes Ian Carrotte Proprietor of ICSM Credit For details about ICSM Credit call 0844 854 1850 or visit the website www.icsmcredit.com or email Ian at Ian.carrotte@icsmcredit.com
ICSM Credit, the Exchange, Express Park, Bristol Road, Bridgwater, Somerset TA6 4RR
Not a member? Normally you can join for less than a tank of diesel and protect yourself from late payers but we have a special free temporary membership offer this winter. Use our free legal letters to chase unpaid invoices.
For a video on how to send a FREE LEGAL LETTER visit: https://youtu.be/AIycysoFhYo
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The shocking collapse of retailing this year (with Debenhams likely to be liquidated) meaning more than a quarter of a million shop workers have lost their jobs in 2020 and suppliers left with nothing
After Arcadia went into administration last month it meant the only potential buyer of Debenhams, namely JD Sports, pulled out thus condemning the nationwide department store to collapse.
“This is another hammer blow to workers and suppliers,” said Ian Carrotte of ICSM Credit, “with invoices unpaid, wages void and pension schemes in doubt it means the economy is being given a body blow. We need the Government to create a strategy to revitalise the high street with rescue and transition packages, plus cuts to rents and business rates. Sadly they seem more interested in the tier system and Covid-19 related matters.”
Department store’s end
You might think 2020 couldn’t get any worse for business but on December 1, Debenhams have had the rug pulled from underneath them as JD Sports pulled out of a rescue deal following the end of Arcadia who have concessions in the department store.
The company had already cut about 6,500 jobs since May, and now has 12,000 workers but it now looks likely the stores will be liquidated with only a slight possibility that some stores or the name could be bought out by rivals.
Ian Carrotte of ICSM Credit said the 242-year-old retailer has already left thousands of suppliers unpaid following administration in April. He said suppliers included printers, sign-makers, designers, clothing manufacturers and landlords will be left with nothing.
Long list of the big names
The Centre for Retail Research in the UK have listed the following British owned retailers who have fallen into administration, or have been liquidated (this is a list of big names - thousands of smaller retailers have also gone bust): Arcadia, the fashion giant with subsidiaries Topshop, Dorothy Perkins, Burtons, Miss Selfridge, Wallis and Evans; Peacocks and Jaeger; Edinburgh Woollen Mill and Ponden Mill; J Crew; Celine Group Holdings, the parent company of Debenhams; M&Co; D W Sports; Feather & Black; Grosvenor Shopping Centre in Chester; Oliver Sweeney Trading; Muji, Cardinal; Soletrader; Peter Jones; Norville Group; Benson Beds; Harveys Furniture; T M Lewin; Bertram Books; Intu Properties, Go Outdoors; Lee Longlands; Poundstretcher; Oak Furnitureland, Le Pain Quotidien; Monsoon Accessorize; Quiz; Aldo; DVF Studio; Antler; Dawson's Music; J Crew; L K Bennet; Oasis and Warehouse; Debenhams; Spicers; Simply Scuba; Kath Kidston; Autonomy Clothing; Lombok; Brighthouse; Laura Ashley; Kikki.K; Soak; Bonmarché; T J Hughes Outlet; HonestJohn.co.uk; Ashbury Furniture; Ena Shaw; Oddbins; Hearing and Mobility; Hawkins; Houseology; Welch and Bill Dobbie; Beales.
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Going, going, gone. Arcadia crashes into administration bringing down the curtain on the glory days of Sir Philip Green's dominance of retailing (leaving £250m in unpaid invoices, 15,000 unemployed and the pension fund in doubt)
ICSM Credit has been warning for months that Sir Philip Green's Arcadia group were on the brink of collapse threatening not to pay an estimated £250m in invoices owed to suppliers.
"It gives me no pleasure to announce the retail giant have gone into administration," said Ian Carrotte of ICSM Credit, "but many suppliers will never see their cash having trusted that Arcadia could not fail. It's a disaster for the British High Street and a tragedy brought to the head by the Covid-19 restrictions on retailing which in my view have been heavy handed and punished bricks and mortar firms over internet outfits."
The end of an era
How could this have happened? Some experts point to a trio of factors: the decline in footfall in general in the high street; uncertainties over Brexit; and Covid-19. It's this last nail in the Arcadia coffin that has been the most damaging.
"If the Government shuts your business down then you are no longer viable," said Ian Carrotte, "no customers mean no business - it's the first rule of business. And yet the likes of Amazon and company can go on trading as normal. It has not been a level playing field."
The Guardian reported today (November 30): "The owner of household names including Topshop, Topman, Miss Selfridge, Dorothy Perkins, Evans and Burton appointed administrators from Deloitte on Monday. No immediate redundancies were made as a result of the appointment and stores will continue to trade. The move will protect Arcadia from creditors while a buyer is sought for all or parts of the company. Green, 68, is not expected to bid for any of the assets.
"Arcadia’s brands are expected to continue trading in stores and online during the sale process, through a light-touch trading administration, the same process being used by the troubled department store chain Debenhams. Arcadia’s management will retain control of the day-to-day running of the business during the process, and its shops in England will reopen on 2 December when the coronavirus lockdown is lifted."
Buyers looking to put in bids
Ian Carrotte said he understood a number of buyers were circling the group looking to pick off the most profitable parts on the assumption that the high street returns to popularity once the pandemic ends. He said: "Boohoo, Mike Ashley’s Frasers Group, formerly known as Sports Direct, and a number of private equity players are showing interest as well as Next and Marks & Spencer may seek elements of the group."
He pointed out the firm owes millions to suppliers as well as leaving a question mark over the group's pension fund.
"The stores will continue trading as the administrators will hope the Christmas and January sales will boost its value and attract buyers," said Ian Carrotte, "but it is more likely to be liquidated with some parts sold on as the brands and store locations still hold a premium."
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MORE STORIES FROM ICSM's WEBSITE
News in brief: the nightmare of Carillion continues; another retailing giant teeters on the brink; plus those firms most hit by the Covid-19 crisis
ICSM - Take Control Of Your Finances (icsmcredit.com)
ICSM Credit News: Sunak says UK economy is 'damaged'; jobs go at papermill; warning over rise in thefts as recession bites; Stoke printer goes bust; and a vote in favour of printed catalogues
ICSM - Take Control Of Your Finances (icsmcredit.com)
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Those gatekeeper excuses on why you’ve not been paid including ‘the finance director is not here today,’ plus 20 more you don't want to hear
ICSM Credit has heard just about every excuse in the book as to why one of our members has not been paid by a client. Chasing payment from a small business or a sole trader may involve visiting the person who authorises payment in their office or even at their place of work or home and putting them on the spot. When it comes to larger firms there is often a gate keeper or the accounts department is physically impossible to reach. That’s when the phone and email appears to be the only way to chase up a late payment. And that’s where the process of getting paid takes on Kafkaesque overtones – a nightmarish round of incomprehensible excuses why you haven’t been paid.
Company disinformation
One of the most irritating company policies to delay payment is the policy of disinformation. When you call the company after an invoice is unpaid there are different excuses, with each one designed to deliberately delay payment. When all of these have been used up and the creditor has lost patience then lobbying the owner or and financial director personally is the final option before legal action.
The problem is often they seem uncontactable. They are out of the country, don’t have a mobile and there doesn’t seem to be an email for them. When you eventually track them down they apologise and claim nobody has told them of the debt and they authorise payment immediately. But you have a strange feeling it may all have been a ruse or a charade. They knew all along you hadn’t been paid and pretended the accounts department were either incompetent or inefficient.
20 excuses you’ve probably heard
We won’t list ‘the cheques is in the post’ as nobody writes cheques these days but it’s a euphemism that can be used for all of these:
1 Our accounts department is very busy.
2 Our customer hasn’t paid us yet.
3 The financial director is on holiday.
4 We’re in the process of switching bank accounts.
5 Out payment terms changed so there will be a delay.
6 We haven’t any record of your invoice.
7 The person who requested the work had no authority.
8 You haven’t put a purchase order number on your invoice.
9 We have gone into administration.
10 We have been bought out and the new owners need to audit all invoices.
11 Our next payment run isn’t until the end of next month.
12 Your invoice is incorrect.
13 We can’t pay.
14 The person who authorises payment is in a meeting.
15 The person who authorises payment has suffered a family bereavement and is on compassionate leave.
16 The person who authorises payment isn’t in the building.
17 The person who authorises payment is off sick.
18 Our computer system is down.
19 We are in the middle of an office move.
20 Our accounts department has moved.
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MORE NEWS
Printing industry mourns the collapse of Westdale Press
There has been an outpouring of emotion by many in the printing and allied industries over the collapse of the Cardiff colour print firm Westdale Press.
Alan Padbury
Reporting in the trade journal Print Week Jo Francis explained how the respected company had been ‘fatally wounded by the double-whammy of Brexit and the Covid-19 pandemic.’
The firm had called in administrators in October after what ICSM credit understands was a battle to keep the business going through out the summer.
Jo Francis said: “Administrators from Menzies were appointed at the Cardiff-based company yesterday (15 October) by managing director and owner Alan Padbury.”
She said Padbury said he had strived to find a way to save the business, which employed around 85 staff. It previously had sales of £13m but had been “limping along” at about £8m this year.
And she reported that he said he was absolutely devastated about the situation.
Print week continued: “It has been a tortuous six months and we’ve done so many things, I could probably write two books. We explored all the possibilities, all of the loan options and tried marketing the company [for sale] but we’ve run out of road.”
In the comments section on the print week website Mitesh Chouhan wrote, “How Tragic, sad story & depressing times :( Sadly there will be more casualties. Westdale had a decent balance sheet, good cash reserves, minimal debt and respectable debtor to creditor ratio.” Antoner Printshire said, “I fear into the new year 2021 there will be carnage within the trade and wider business community.” While Gerrard Moss said: “I've been in printing just over 50 years and seen several recessions in this time, this one is a bad one because there seems to be no end in sight to this virus.” David Deere pointed out that the MD had sold his car and other assets to pay for wages as the firm struggled.
The main comments also expressed sympathy largely because the recession has hit businesses that were viable before the virus arrived. Matt Booker summer up the thoughts of many: “As a longstanding customer of Westdale Press I have to say they were a first class operation, and this is the saddest of news for all of the people involved. Well invested, extremely well run and with a team that from top to bottom had an unrivalled level of knowledge and dedication. Unfair is a huge understatement. This industry needs more people like Westdale Press.”
CVA for Jellyfish
Joe Francis in Print Week also had story on a CVA for Jellyfish Solutions in Hampshire a print management firm.
She wrote: “Creditors of Jellyfish Solutions approved the CVA (Company Voluntary Arrangement) proposal last month. Jellyfish is based in Fair Oak, Hampshire. Its services include print management for book publishers alongside commercial print products such as brochures, guides and flyers. It also offers consulting services.
“The business is run by husband and wife team Richard and Amanda Ankers. The proposal stated that unsecured creditors would be likely to receive a more than ten-fold better return if the CVA was approved, than if the business was liquidated. Creditors have agreed to the deal that should see them receive 37.42p in the £ over three years, compared to an estimated 3.22p should the business have gone into administration.
Insolvency practitioners Andrew Andronikou and Michael Kiely of Quantuma are the joint supervisors of the CVA. Jellyfish was founded nearly 15 years ago, originally with backing from Ashford Colour Press, where the Ankers had both worked.”
Print Week reported th the Covid-19 pandemic had decimated sales, with client spending on hold and some of its biggest customers in travel, sport and leisure canning their promo plans altogether.
James Cropper
There has been a sigh of relief from many in the printing and allied industries after Rishi Sunak extended the furlough scheme to the end of March. Ian Carrotte of ICSM Credit said there had been an expected surge in insolvencies in the industry at the end of October which didn’t occur due to the extension of the scheme.
One of the effects of the lock downs and constraints on the industry has emerged with the news that the Cumbrian papermaker James Cropper has seen a fall in revenue. Richard Stuart-Turner for Print Week magazine reported: “By division, revenue in James Cropper's Paper division was down by 45% year-on-year from £38m to £20.9m, Technical Fibre Products (TFP) recorded revenue of £11.7m, down 13.7% from £13.6m a year earlier, and the group’s Colourform division recorded sales of £1.4m, up 16.5% on the £1.2m reported in the first half of 2019.”
Zoom meeting
A meeting of creditors via Zoom is set to take place on November 20 to discuss the fall out from the collapse of Camberley based Lithoxpress Limited.
A resolution to wind-up the company is to be considered at the planned general meeting conducted by Kieran Bourne of Cromwell & Co Insolvency Practitioners of Coventry.
The owner Clive Bryant has been in post for more than 13 years at the business that lists graphic design, advertising and printing as part of its services
Stoke firm liquidated
Wood Mitchell Printers Limited in Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire have held a Creditors' Voluntary Liquidation Deemed in Consent Meeting. The firm founded 116 years ago and based at Festival Way have taken the voluntary liquidation route in an attempt to retain control over the process. ICSM Credit understands the family firm employed up to 50 staff and according to their website print leaflets, brochures, posters, catalogues, short run magazines and flyers.
Cake cooked
Manchester based Cake Marketing and Advertising have appointed liquidators. The self-styled ‘boutique agency’ full-service advertising firm said in its publicity that they are in business to help clients get a ‘bigger slice.’
Over reached
The newspaper firm formally known as Trinity Mirror are planning on closing two more printing plants with the loss of 150 jobs. Reach said they need to ‘balancing production of its regional and national titles, and contract work’ with the closure of their Luton and Birmingham plants.
Writing in Print Week Jo Francis said: “Reach Printing Services currently has six sites across the country. The Luton site, formerly West Ferry Printers, was acquired in 2018 as part of Reach's acquisition of Northern & Shell’s publishing assets. At the time there was concern about the long-term viability of the plant, which only opened in 2011, due to its proximity to Reach’s existing Watford site.”
Ian Carrotte of ICSM Credit said it was part of the slow decline of the newspaper industry with sales falling even faster during the Covid-19 crisis as customers cannot always access copies in shops.
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Estate agent in turmoil
One of the country’s largest chains of estate agents is experiencing massive concerns over its long term viability sparked by the problems of 2020. Countrywide is supplied by thousands of companies, from sign-makers to computer firms and employs around 10,000 staff across its 850 or so High Street outlets. Shareholder nerves were tested this week when they rejected a £90m cash injection from private equity group Alchemy Partners and by the resignation of the chairman peter Long.
The rescue bid floundered when rivals Connells put in a bid to buy the chain with a much-reduced valuation of the business sending shares into a fall.
Ian Carrotte of ICSM Credit said: “There are major problems with Countrywide and I would advise all suppliers to be very cautious as it has all the hallmarks of a company in trouble.
“As we have seen in the past no company is big enough or famous enough to fail so be very cautious in allowing credit.”
Fraud case
Lucy White of the Daily Mail has reported on the fall-out of one the worst corporate fraud cases in recent years. London Capital & Finance promised high returns on savings sucking in thousands of investors only to shut down the scheme without paying the promised returns but retaining the investors’ cash.
The journalist wrote: “The City watchdog is under pressure to publish a long-awaited review into its handling of the London Capital & Finance (LCF) savings scandal. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), which has been slammed by LCF victims for failing to act on warnings about the collapsed firm, was finally handed a copy of Dame Elizabeth Gloster's independent review on Monday.
“But the 11,600 victims who have lost around £237million are still waiting to see Gloster's findings, as the FCA will now read the report, write its own report on the findings, and finally send both documents to the Treasury for publication. LCF tumbled into administration in January 2019, after selling 'minibonds' to thousands of savers. They were promised high returns for low risk, as LCF said it would lend their money to businesses which needed the money to grow.
“But investors were left high and dry when the firm collapsed, and it turned out that their money had been funnelled to a small number of borrowers. Thirteen people connected to LCF are now being sued for £178million in connection with an alleged fraud, after it was claimed that savers' cash was used to buy horses, a helicopter and a lifetime membership to a Mayfair private members' club.”
She wrote that Gloster, a former Court of Appeal judge, was initially due to report in July but had to push the deadline back after the FCA revealed heaps more evidence.
Ian Carrotte said many of the victims had lost their life savings and taken cash out of their business to invest in the scheme were much poorer as a result. He said: “If an investment scheme seems too good to be true then it probably is.”
Logistics company seeks CVA
Trade publication Motor Transport have covered the story of the logistics outfit Brian Yeardley Continental who are seeking a CVA after suffering a £12m loss due to pandemic.
The trade journal said: “Brian Yeardley Continental is proposing to issue a company voluntary arrangement after its events transport division, Brian Yeardley, suffered the ‘devastating’ loss of £12m due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The West Yorkshire-based haulier has appointed partners Charles King and Hunter Kelly of EY to oversee the process.”
Building firm enters administration
Goodwin’s Construction Services Group of Manchester has entered administration caused by the Covid-19 crisis drying up cash flow.
The company was founded in 2014 and originally known as Goodwin Construction Group, was part of the Goodwin Group working on projects across the North West of England.
The firm has appointed Yasmin Bhikha, John Lowe, and Anthony Collier of FRP Advisory as joint administrators. The Goodwin Group is unaffected however but 30 members of staff have been made redundant so far.
John Lowe said: “Goodwin’s Construction Services was a strong business but, unfortunately, the challenges facing the business left it with no option other than to appoint administrators as it was unable to generate the cashflow to remain solvent. Our priority is now to support those employees affected and we will be working closely with the redundancy payments service to do so.”
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Runners and Riders Below is a collated list taken from the Government’s London Gazette of various businesses who are experiencing problems in the last few weeks.
Administrators Appointed Airport Parking Rentals (Gatwick) Limited 44140 Armondi UK Limited Ball, Roller and Transmissions Bearings Limited 44138 Brown and Mason Limited 44103 Camino Leisure Holdings Limited 44138 Camino Restaurants Limited 44138 Clothing 4 Limited 44134 Cote Group (Bidco) Limited 44103 Cote Kitchens Limited 44103 Cote Restaurants Group Holdings Limited 44103 Cote Restaurants Limited 44103 Cramlington Renewable Energy Developments Hold Co Limited Createability Limited GBK Restaurants Limited GBK Retail Limited Gourmet Burger Kitchen Limited Greenfields Meat Limited 44103 I.O.W. Tours Limited Jackson and Rye Restaurants Limited 44103 Paypark Limited 44140 Portsmouth Language College Limited Promo International Limited Taste Bidco Limited 44103 The Staff Canteen 44139 Compulsory Liquidators Appointed s 136 Cardinal Security Limited 44106 Goco Property Services Limited 44106 Mike De Courcey Travel Limited Renaldy Hotels Limited Shepherd Cox Hotels (Croft on Tees) Limited Sky World Media Limited 44103 So Create Limited 44153 Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidation Deemed in Consent Meetings A.B. Logistics Midlands Ltd Ace Point Travel Limited 44148 Acton Finishing (Stourbridge) Limited Applied Business Minds Limited 44106 Artwork Design (M/C) Limited Cardiff Bay Leisure Ltd. Cobain Roofing Limited 44106 Crew Construction Ground Works And Civils Limited 44106 Cut & Run Limited DCG Media Limited Devon School of English Limited Emerald Painters Southern Limited 06.11.2020 Energyst Media Limited 10.11.2020 Fennek Design Limited 06.11.2020 G2S Group Limited Hanmer Freight Services Limited 10.11.2020 Hindsight Media Services Limited Insignia Signs and Services Limited 44140 K Cruises Trading Limited Kingfisher Graphics LLP 10.11.2020 Jon Haywood Logistics Limited JSH Entertainment Limited 06.11.2020 Maijestic Couriers Limited Moca Italian Delicatessen Limited 06.11.2020 N Jeeves Transport Limited Newcastle Oil and Gas Limited Online Marketing Now Limited PB Tranport Limited Premier Plastic Cards Limited 06.11.2020 Power Graphic Displays Limited Powerline Transport Limited Quality Care Midlands Limited Ran Ales Limited RJS Transport Limited 44153 Thomas Interiors Limited 44158 Townend Weaving Limited 44106 West Ewell Stores Ltd 44103 Wood Mitchell Printers Limited 44138 Liquidators Appointed 3CT Exhibition Services Limited 10.11.2020 AB Logistics Midlands Limited 44138 A C Cooper (Neg and Print) Limited 44103 Archant BHGC Limited 44153 Archant Holdings Limited 44153 Arlington Design Limited 10.11.2020 Barry Bensons Limited 44103 Baxter Fawcett Design Studio Limited 44103 Best And Scholes Dental Laboratories Limited 44103 Blackfriars Wine Bar Limited 1 Logistics Nationwide Limited 44103 Blue Lotus International Limited 44106 Brixton Beds and Furniture Limited 44106 Burnsides (Marketing Aids) Limited 44134 Cake Advertising & Marketing Limited 44139 Cardiff Bay Leisure Limited 44139 Chemiphase Limited 44106 Chevron Transport Limited CKL Building Solutions Limited 44106 Continental Europe Express Limited 44106 DCG Media Limited Eazy Printing Limited E Haul Limited 44106 Eco Energy Go Warm Solutions Ltd 44106 EMP Publishing Limited 44103 Everything Hospitality Limited Experience Theatre Ltd Fox Marketing Services MC Limited Girotondo Schools Limited 4410 GGS Photo Graphics Limited Harrier Direct Limited 44106 Hoq Marketing Limited 44140 Innovation Logistics Limited 44103 Intelligent Media (Worldwide) Limited 44148 Kanter Transport Limited 44103 Kingfisher Graphics LLP 44155 Left Media Limited 44155 Mankind Carrier Limited 44155 Magnum & Larder Limited 44106 MLR Media Limited 44106 Monsoon Holdings (No1) Limited 44155 N & P Logistics Limited Oakwood Construction (Midlands) Limited 44138 Odessa Print Group Limited PB Tranport Limited 10.11.2020 PMCG Civils Design Limited 10.11.2020 Procon Construction Limited 10.11.2020 Power Start Garage Limited Quadrant Recruitment Limited 44106 Retail Print Solutions Limited 44158 RMJ Ceramics & Building Services Limited 44103 Rosehill Press Limited SEO Manchester Agency Limited Sharrow Bay Hotel Limited Specialist Models and Displays Limited 44158 STA Travel Limited STB Printing Limited 44151 South Tynedale Railway Limited 44103 Superimpose Studio Limited 44103 Speedifix Pools Limited 44106 TDG Marketing Limited 44158 The Queen Hotel (Mosborough) Limited 44153 Three Halves Communications Limited Top Drawer Entertainment Ltd 44148 Trinity News Leeds Limited 44106 Truckfast Truckserve Holdings Limited 44106 Tunnel Brewery Limited Umbrella (South East) Limited 44106 Universal Tyres (Harrogate) Limited Vision B2B Marketing & Training Ltd t/a Vision B2B 44139 Wellington Signs and Designs Limited 44151 West Somerset Motorsport Limited Wight Bay Hotel Limited Wms Care Services Ltd Wood Mitchell Printers Limited 44158 Xpress News And Mags Limited 44103 Yellow Van London Limited Members Voluntary Liquidations 3C Transport Limited 44148 Alldesign Limited AMG Advertising Topco Limited 06.11.2020 Aperture Post Production Limited 44131 Applejack Estates Limited 44106 Aria Consultancy Ltd 44106 Arc Media Consulting Limited Aviation Adventures Limited Avon Gold Limited 44138 Axxor Media Limited 44148 Beta Baboon Limited 44106 Booth Homes Limited Bowler Hat Solutions Limited Braemar Property Services Limited 44103 Bridgepoint Funding II Limited 44103 Building Bridges Limited 44148 Cammock Investments Limited 44103 Campus Construction Limited Castle Reed Motors Limited Charter Manufacturing International Limited 44103 CME Marketing Europe Limited Craftsmanship Limited CRC Marketing Limited 06.11.2020 D.W. Sales and Marketing Limited 06.11.2020 Ferreir Ad Design Works Limited 06.11.2020 Effective Marketing Solutions Limited Eleco Media Limited Empire Design London Limited Full House Communications Limited 44158 Gosford Meat Supply Company Limited 44103 JC Sales and Marketing Limited 44155 Level Eight Design Limited 44155 Lindsell Marketing Limited 44148 Loyallypop Limited 44106 Millane (Holdings) Limited 44106 Minium Financial Technology Ltd 44106 PCR Deliveries Limited 44106 Peter Lowe Design Limited Purple Spark Solutions Ltd 44106 Quercus (Nursing Homes) Limited Reader Haulage Limited 44139 Retail Interests Limited 44103 Souvenir Press (Educational and Academic)) 44153 Souvenir Press Limited 44153 Stratus marketing Limited 44160 Surrey Sports Limited 44106 The Harrison Stickle Group Limited 44106 WMS Logistics Limited Petitions to Wind Up All England Gas Services Limited BHB Partnership Limited DJ Consulting (U.K.) Limited 44106 DPB Transport Limited 44148 Electricians 24-7 Limited 44109 I And I Media Limited Premier Paving South West Limited 44106 Process Print (Labelling and Design) Limited South Hospitality Trading Limited 44153 Sports Café 2008 (Leeds) Limited 44153 Wardells Design Limited 44158 Winding up orders All England Gas Services Limited AMFI Logistics Ltd Commercial Foods Limited HD Design and Construction Limited Kayli Construction Limited 44139 Macclesfield Town Football Club Limited MK Scaffolding Specialists Limited Paragon Construction Group Limited 44138 SLK Homes and Design Limited 44153 Unlockd Media Operations Limited Winding Up Dismissal Sanguine Hospitality Limited 44151
ICSM CREDIT
For information on ICSM visit www.icsmcredit.com or call 0844 854 1850. ICSM, The Exchange, Express Park, Bristol Road, Bridgwater, Somerset TA6 4RR. Tel: 0844 854 1850. www.icsmcredit.com. Ian.carrotte@icsmcredit.com
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