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Collective redundancyManufacturingLatest NewsJob creation and lossesInsolvency

Fears for 5,000 steel jobs as financial backer appoints administrator

by Ashleigh Webber 9 Mar 2021
by Ashleigh Webber 9 Mar 2021 Greensill Capital is the main financial backer for Liberty Steel
Kay Roxby / Alamy Stock Photo
Greensill Capital is the main financial backer for Liberty Steel
Kay Roxby / Alamy Stock Photo

Around 5,000 UK steel jobs are at risk as one of the industry’s financial backers has gone into administration.

Greensill Capital, which appointed administrators on Tuesday morning (9 March), is the main financial lender to Liberty Steel, which employs around 3,000 people at a dozen sites across the UK. Another 2,000 people are employed at engineering businesses within the same group as Liberty Steel – GFG Alliance.

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The Community union held crisis talks with GFG Alliance executive chairman Sanjeev Gupta, and said afterwards: “Sanjeev Gupta needs to tell us exactly what the administration means for Liberty’s UK businesses and how he plans to protect jobs. The future of Liberty’s strategic steel assets must be secured and we are ready to work with all stakeholders to find a solution.”

Business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng reportedly held an emergency meeting with Liberty Steel’s chief executive, John Ferriman, on Sunday, to discuss what would happen if the firm went bust.

According to court documents seen by the Financial Times, GFG Alliance said last month that it would collapse if Greensill stopped providing it with working capital.

A GFG spokesperson said: “Our operations are running as normal and our core businesses continue to benefit from strong market conditions generating robust sales and cashflows.”

Greensill’s administrator, Grant Thornton, said it was in discussions with an “interested party” in the relation to the purchase of certain Greensill Capital assets.

A spokesperson for Gupta said Liberty’s operations were “running as normal”, had adequate funding for its current needs and that the refinancing plans were progressing.

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Last month the Office for National Statistics revealed that the number of people on company payrolls had fallen by 726,000 since February 2020, although the larger falls were seen at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. Unemployment, however, was at its highest in five years.

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Ashleigh Webber

Ashleigh is a former editor of OHW+ and former HR and wellbeing editor at Personnel Today. Ashleigh's areas of interest include employee health and wellbeing, equality and inclusion and skills development. She has hosted many webinars for Personnel Today, on topics including employee retention, financial wellbeing and menopause support.

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