Sunday, 6 July 2008




While most of us will be worrying about the rate of inflation, falling house prices and the looming prospect of stagflation, one group of corporate advisers should be rubbing their hands with glee.

As the downturn bites and company chiefs begin to pay much more attention to the accounts, that’s when the scams, cons and ‘company perks’ come into focus. Who you gonna call? Yes, the fraud busters. Or the forensics experts or, if things get really bad, the insolvency practitioners.

This week claims surfaced that the business world was about to see a significant rise in corporate investigations as a result of the credit crunch.

Observers noted that as the ‘boom time’ fades, cases that would otherwise have ducked below the radar will come starkly into view.

According to Keith Williamson, a director at Alix Partners, there will be a special focus on overseas operations and that companies will need to take proactive steps to avoid fraud and bribery.

Wise words and they should be manna from heaven for fraud and forensics specialists looking to build their practices.

Indeed, the latest figures from BDO Stoy Hayward’s FraudTrack study claims that reported fraud has risen to a value of £705, for the first six months of this year, up a huge 74% on the same period last year.

Simon Bevan, head of fraud investigation at BDO, said: ‘We are seeing a dramatic increase in banks, corporates and public sector organisations contacting us directly about our fraud investigation and prevention services and we expect this to rocket further still. Interest is coming from Board level as senior executives at British businesses are becoming increasingly concerned about fraud risk as the credit crunch bites.’

While you might expect to see insolvency business improve, as an indication that these assumptions are being borne out, it seems this is not happening. While credit insurers are seeing claims rise and an increase in debt collection work, Martin Williams, managing director at credit agency Graydon, says the expected ‘increase in liquidation figures are conspicuous by their absence so far’. Indeed, he hears from insolvency practitioners that the predicted uplift in work hasn’t happened yet.

This might be a concern for some insolvency practices that have recently made acquisitions to beef up their insolvency offering.

However, there is still the rest of the year and if Bank of England warnings are anything to go by, the downturn could end up yielding an insolvency bonanza too.



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