Henry collapse drops bomb in bonding market
The collapse of Henry Construction has triggered a serious bonding crunch for contractors.
Some bond providers are warning firms will now find it much more difficult and costly to raise bonds as a result of the fallout.
Surety capacity is being constrained as providers seek to manage risk, and brokers now warn that contractors with tight headroom on balance sheets could be refused bonding.
Chris Davies, managing director of broker DRS Bond Management, said: “The demise of Henry has bombed the market for probably a year to 18 months.
“It was a once in 10-year event for a company of this size but comes off the back of already high levels of corporate insolvency over the last 18 months.”
“The surety market has taken a big hit which is seeing bond capacity tightening appreciably. The next year or so is going to be difficult to say the least”