East & Partners

SME Dependency on Major Clients Fuels Insolvency Fears – ScotPac

(23 June 2025 – Australia) Almost 1 in 5 of SMEs say their business would not survive the loss of one major client, highlighting that business insolvencies continue to be a major concern in 2025 and are one shock from collapse.

The over-reliance of SMEs on a single client was a major finding in the latest edition of ScotPac’s bi-annual SME Growth Index Report. It found that 17 percent of Australian SMEs believe they would be out of business if one major client or supplier fell over, highlighting the need for SMEs to manage concentration risk.

The finding comes on the heels of ASIC data that revealed 3,306 companies became insolvent for the first time in the first three months of 2025, and restructuring appointments have seen a seven-fold increase over the past three years.

Construction, which accounts for almost 1 in 10 jobs in Australia (9.5 percent), was one of the hardest hit sectors.  More than 2,600 construction businesses became insolvent in the financial year to March 2025, up almost 25 percent year-on-year.

“Diversifying funding sources is critical for boosting SME resilience against market fluctuations. This feedback tells us that too many SMEs are just one shock away from collapse” commented ScotPac CEO, Jon Sutton.

“Relying heavily on a single client or supplier can create serious vulnerability – especially in a volatile trading environment. Over the past 12 months we’ve seen insolvency levels not witnessed in more than a decade, driven by rising costs, aggressive debt collection, and weakening consumer demand.”

“ScotPac can help by working with brokers to regularly assess an SME’s business risk and by exploring flexible finance solutions to manage volatility. In challenging conditions, businesses that diversify their client base and secure flexible funding are the ones that survive and thrive. That’s where ScotPac can make a real difference – helping SMEs optimise their cashflow so they remain agile when it matters most.”

Key findings from Round 22 of the long running SME Growth Index Report include:

  • SMEs reported that losing a key client would, on average, result in average revenue loss of 22 percent.
  • 59 percent of SMEs predicting declining revenue growth are now in full contraction – three times the level seen in 2019 – signalling further business failures are likely.
  • In addition to construction, hospitality businesses are particularly vulnerable, with restaurants and cafes struggling to manage rising operational costs and tighter consumer spending

About the SME Growth Index

Commencing in March 2014, ScotPac’s twice-yearly SME Growth Index is Australia’s longest-running research report on SME sentiment towards revenue growth prospects.

The Round 22 research was conducted by East & Partners who interviewed 724 SME enterprises with annual revenues of A$1-20 million.

SMEs surveyed have operated continuously for an average of 15.6 years and manage, on average, 55 full-time employees.

Sectors represented in the survey included Property & Business Services (14%), Manufacturing (13%), Wholesale (12%), Retail (10%), Transport & Storage (10%), Personal & Other Services (10%), Construction (10%) and other industries including Mining & Resources, Agriculture, Media & Telco, Accommodation, Cafes & Restaurants, Finance & Insurance (non-bank) and Electricity, Gas & Water.

 ScotPac is Australia and New Zealand’s largest non-bank SME business lender, providing funding to small, medium and large businesses from start-ups to enterprises exceeding $1 billion in revenues. For more than 35 years, ScotPac has helped thousands of business owners succeed, offering fast and flexible funding. From simple to complex, small to large, start-up, growth or turnaround – ScotPac can help with a range of funding including Invoice Finance, Trade Finance, Asset Finance and Business Loans.

Connect
with East

At East & Partners we work together as one firm to serve our clients wherever they need us.

Our collective knowledge and experience across global  markets helps us guide clients on the intricacies of each region while enabling cohesion across their global footprint. Apples with apples and pears with pears in complex and demanding financial services markets
globally.

subscribe
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.