Largest and Smallest Companies See Biggest Improvements in Payment Performance

Largest and Smallest Companies See Biggest Improvements in Payment Performance

Nottingham, 28 July 2010 — The Late Payment Index from Experian®, the global information services company, shows that UK businesses paid their bills significantly faster during April to June of this year than they did compared to the same period last year.

Experian’s analysis shows that during Q2, 2010 businesses paid their bills an average of 20.99 days late compared to 23.61 days late in Q2 2009.

Joe Myers, Head of Commercial Credit at Experian, said: “Even though they remain among the slowest payers, the largest companies have improved significantly over the last year.  This improvement in cash-flow is good news for everyone, especially smaller companies, and better for the economy as a whole. Our analysis also underlines why it is important for businesses of all sizes to monitor their customers’ and suppliers’ payment performance.”

Q2 trends:

  •   In terms of size of business, micro businesses (1 to 2 employees) led the improvements from Q2 2009 to Q2 2010 – from 21.01 days to 18.32 days followed closely by the largest companies (501 plus employees) – from 40.48 days to 35.43 days.
  • The biggest improvements came from the IT sector, which almost halved its late payment times year-on-year (from 26.08 days to 14.27 in Q2 2010).  The Oil sector and the Spirits, Wine and Tobacco trade also saw big improvements.
  • The Property sector continues to pay its bills the slowest, averaging 33.06 days beyond terms. This is over 13 days slower than the national average.
  • The South East saw the biggest improvement in payment performance since Q2 2009, going from 20.08 to 16.32 days beyond agreed terms on average.  Only businesses in the South West paid faster (15.83 days late).
  • The only region to see late payment times worsen, albeit marginally, was Scotland - from 23.38 in Q2 2009 to 23.65 in Q2 2010.
  • Averaging 25.16 days beyond terms, the North West overtook London to become the slowest-paying region.

Government Region

Days beyond terms Q2 2010

Days beyond terms Q2 2009

% change from Q2 2009

Scotland

  23.65

    23.38

1.1

North East

  22.78

    24.95

-8.7

North West

  25.16

    26.21

-4.0

Yorkshire

  22.27

    23.63

-5.7

Wales

  21.14

    23.09

-8.4

West Midlands

  22.93

    26.16

-12.3

East Midlands

  20.22

    22.29

-9.3

Eastern

  19.02

    21.63

-12.1

South West

  15.83

    18.73

-15.5

Greater London

  24.07

    28.42

-15.3

South East

  16.32

    20.08

-18.7

Northern Ireland

  19.70

    21.26

-7.3

National Average

  20.97

    23.58

-11.1

Source: Experian

Employment

Days beyond terms Q2 2010

Days beyond terms Q2 2009

% change from Q2 2009

1-2

  18.32

    21.01

-12.8

3-5

  19.60

    21.20

-7.5

6-10

  18.63

    20.38

-8.6

11-25

  18.37

    19.95

-7.9

26-50

  18.92

    20.74

-8.8

51-100

  19.42

    22.17

-12.4

101-500

  23.57

    26.12

-9.8

501+

  35.43

    40.48

-12.5

Unspecified

  25.47

    30.98

-17.8

National Average

  20.99

    23.61

-11.1

Source: Experian

Industry Sector

Days beyond terms Q2 2010

Days beyond terms Q2 2009

% change from Q2 2009

Extractive Industries

  22.35

    24.91

-10.3

Oil

  12.26

    20.68

-40.7

Building and Construction

  20.31

    22.23

-8.6

Building Materials

  19.64

    19.51

0.7

Chemicals Industry

  17.20

    19.09

-9.9

Diversified Industrials

  19.13

    20.19

-5.3

Electricals

  15.40

    19.58

-21.4

Engineering

  16.02

    18.22

-12.1

Printing, Paper and Packaging

  16.56

    20.57

-19.5

Textiles and Clothing

  23.18

    25.53

-9.2

Breweries

  15.48

    24.49

-36.8

Spirits, Wine and Tobacco

  15.80

    18.82

-16.0

Food Manufacturing

  20.00

    23.38

-14.5

Pharmaceuticals

  16.90

    19.07

-11.4

Wholesaling

  17.93

    20.54

-12.7

Leisure and Hotels

  30.62

    28.32

8.1

Media

  19.70

    22.55

-12.7

Food Retailing

  30.54

    26.01

17.4

Non-Food Retailing

  22.03

    21.11

4.4

Servicing/Repair

  14.02

    15.90

-11.8

Transport

  19.30

    22.25

-13.3

Utilities

  21.60

    31.67

-31.8

Postal and Telecommunications

  31.26

    41.71

-25.0

Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing

   9.44

    11.99

-21.3

Banking and Financial Services

  25.84

    30.37

-14.9

Health and Household

  17.69

    23.09

-23.4

Business Services

  18.49

    23.62

-21.7

Hiring and Leasing

  22.30

    22.39

-0.4

Property

  33.06

    40.11

-17.6

Other Services

  17.65

    19.32

-8.6

Plastics & Rubber

  21.05

    23.00

-8.5

Insurance

  19.96

    23.00

-13.2

IT

  14.27

    26.08

-45.3

Motor Traders

  16.71

    16.58

0.8

Unspecified

  33.80

    58.24

-42.0

National Average

  20.99

    23.61

-11.1

Source: Experian

ENDS

Contact:

Natalie Hale

0115 992 2645/07971 709274

natalie.hale@uk.experian.com

About Experian
Experian is the leading global information services company, providing data and analytical tools to clients in more than 90 countries. The company helps businesses to manage credit risk, prevent fraud, target marketing offers and automate decision making. Experian also helps individuals to check their credit report and credit score, and protect against identity theft.

Experian plc is listed on the London Stock Exchange (EXPN) and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 index. Total revenue for the year ended 31 March 2010 was $3.9 billion. Experian employs approximately 15,000 people in 40 countries and has its corporate headquarters in Dublin, Ireland, with operational headquarters in Nottingham, UK; Costa Mesa, California; and São Paulo, Brazil.

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