
A metalwork firm that employed hundreds of people in the North East, Midlands and South East has collapsed only months after it was rescued in a pre-pack administration deal.
In September, Fablink Group was acquired in a near £3m deal by investors Praetura Commercial Finance and TDC Impact Limited, which backed director Richard Westley in a new venture called Wharfside Industrials. Administrators at the time hoped a string of pre-pack deals involving eight group subsidiaries had safeguarded the future of the business, which specialised in metal pressings, cab assemblies and fuel tanks, and operated from bases in County Durham and Wolverhampton, Luton and Northamptonshire.
But in the intervening months the business lost contracts with several key customers and now administrators from EY have been appointed. The majority of the group's 427 staff, including around 200 in County Durham, have been made redundant while joint administrators Lucy Winterborne and Dan Hurd explore a sale of certain parts of the group and its assets.
September's collapse of the group came in the wake of a problematic few years for Fablink in which £5m Government grant funding for the relocation of its Wolverhampton site is said to have failed to materialise. It also suffered a £1.5m bad debt following the insolvency of an electric vehicles customer in 2023.
There were also pressures from a quality issue relating to cabs produced for a key customer that resulted in increased production costs and lost sales. Administrators also talked of burdensome costs related to an electric vehicles contract where volumes had been smaller than expected.
Early last year, main lender HSBC brought in insolvency and restructuring specialists Interpath to review the firm's short-term cash flow and by March, work was under way to find a buyer and assess restructuring options. Under significant pressure from creditors, only one offer was made, from the buyers Praetura Commercial Finance and TDC Impact. About £1m of the £2.95m offer was still due to be paid in instalments leading up to September 2025.
Documents show that at the time of its administration in September, the group owed trade creditors more than £2m. An overall deficit of £14.4m was also reported.
A statement from the administrators at EY said: "The group was acquired out of administration in September 2024, but since then it has unfortunately lost the business of certain key customers. The group’s management team has worked tirelessly to find a viable solution to rescue the business, however, the significant loss of business has severely impacted the group’s future viability. As a result, the directors have determined that they have no option other than to place the group into administration.