ǿմý’s CEO White Paper reveals clients ‘often’ pay late and banks are unwilling to give loans

Three quarters of leading bosses in construction have revealed they are “often” paid late by clients with almost a quarter complaining payments regularly come in more than four weeks’ overdue.

The findings, revealed through a survey of 55 chief and other senior executives carried out as part of ǿմý’s new “state of the nation” style CEO White Paper, also pointed to wider financial difficulties.

These included problems with bank lending, with just 15% saying that the willingness of banks to lend to their business had improved over the past six months, one-fifth claiming the situation had actually worsened, and 42% saying the situation had remained about the same.

The government’s Project Merlin is attempting to get the big four banks - HSBC, Lloyds, Barclays and RBS - to lend more to small and medium sized enterprises but construction is viewed as particularly high-risk by the banking sector due to factors including the low margins many firms operate at and their typical lack of tangible assets.

More than 60 construction leaders attended ǿմý’s CEO Summit at the Savoy on Thursday last week. It was the first of ǿմý’s quarterly networking events for chief executives.
Thursday’s event, sponsored by AON, Fenwick Elliott and KPMG, was also the formal launch of the CEO White Paper, available on ǿմý.co.uk from today.

Industry bosses including Terry Morgan, chairman of Crossrail, John Frankiewicz, chief executive of Willmott Dixon a