Dan Whelan Only a fraction of the £6m that debtors owe the collapsed construction firm has been realised to date, and its administrators say the outlook for unsecured creditors owed £7.5m is “unclear”. Warrington-based Cruden Construction collapsed last year with total debts of £19m as a result of “cashflow pressures due to losses on several contracts exacerbated by additional cost outlays due to Covid-19”, according to administrator KPMG. Cruden’s most realistic prospect of repaying creditors is to claw back money it is owed by debtors, but so far only £6,300 has been recovered, according to KPMG’s latest report. The report states that Cruden’s debtor ledger is its “main asset” but that the majority of debts owed to the company do not fall due for another 12 to 18 months.