Partner
Welcome to the Slough office of Begbies Traynor. We are the UK’s foremost provider of advisory and support services relating to corporate insolvency and financial crisis situations.
If you’d like to find out how we can help you take the difficult decisions that arise in the context of a financial crisis then you can call our Slough office any time to arrange a consultation. One of our experts will be happy to meet with you at any time and location that works best for you.
At Begbies Traynor, we’ve been supporting company directors and management teams in moments of financial crisis for more than three decades. We provide the clearest possible advice and actionable guidance to make a tangible difference to our clients and their companies’ futures.
The businesses we work with are drawn from across a very wide variety of different industry sectors and they range from being small in scale to being multinational operators with thousands of employees. The in-house knowledge and specialist skills we have at each Begbies Traynor office, including our base here in Slough, is second to none in the UK.
Contact us any time to arrange an initial consultation. The sooner you get in touch, the sooner we can start outlining the options available to you and start helping you make the right decisions for your future.
2nd Thoughts Ltd, trading as Ellie Louise and Happit, was sold by our Leeds team after this long established chain fell victim to the retail sector downturn. Moving quickly they secured a buyer three …
Read more →The Company had relationships with some national house builders as well as smaller Companies. They had experienced cash flow issues due to slow paying debtors and this meant that they had fallen beh…
Read more →This London-based large-scale printer was given a cash payment to move from its site by the London Development Agency (LDA), making way for London’s 2012 Olympic Park. After moving, the firm experie…
Read more →The latest Red Flag Alert research for Q4 2020 has recorded 630,000 businesses in ‘significant distress1’ after the largest numerical quarterly leap (73,000) in financially distressed companies since Q2 2017. This 13% increase (from 557,000 in Q3 2020) co
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