UK IT Channel News | IT Channel Oxygen
  • News
  • Topics
    • Vendor
    • Distributor
    • Partner
    • Indepth
    • Sustainability
    • M&A
    • People Moves
    • AI
    • Tech trends
  • Sustainability
  • About Us
  • Partner with us
Members
Must-Know Distributors
Oxygen 250
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Topics
    • Vendor
    • Distributor
    • Partner
    • Indepth
    • Sustainability
    • M&A
    • People Moves
    • AI
    • Tech trends
  • Sustainability
  • About Us
  • Partner with us
No Result
View All Result
UK IT Channel News | IT Channel Oxygen
No Result
View All Result
Home Cybersecurity

5 key takeaways from Adarma administrator’s report

Statement of Proposals follows collapse of Scottish managed security outfit last month

Oxygen staff by Oxygen staff
28 August 2025
in Cybersecurity, News, Partner
5 key takeaways from Adarma administrator’s report
Share on LinkedinShare on Twitter

Adarma collapsed owing CrowdStrike £327,000 and was experiencing “acute liquidity pressures” following the loss of two customers and the downscaling of others.

Those are among the fresh facts contained in a newly filed report from Interpath, which was appointed as administrator of the Scottish managed security services provider on 14 July.

Founded in 2012, Adarma ranked 108th in Oxygen 250 2025.

But the Edinburgh-based outfit, which specialised in the design, development and management of security operations for large companies, abruptly ceased trading and laid off 173 of its 176 staff last month.

Here we round up five nuggets that emerged from an administrator’s statement of proposals filed on Companies House last week.

1. Adarma was running on empty

The report threw new light on the “acute liquidity pressures” Adarma was experiencing in the period leading up to its collapse.

Having “performed well” following its acquisition by Livingbridge in 2019, Adarma endured “significant trading challenges” in 2024 and 2025, it explained.

According to management accounts, calendar 2024 revenues slumped to £37.6m, down from £44.7m in 2023, with adjusted EBITDA losses hitting £1.4m.

Despite Livingbridge handing it a further £3m 2024, Adarma continued to trade at a loss, with Interpath determining in March 2025 that it would likely run out of cash by June 2025.

2. Customer losses to blame

In its most recently filed annual accounts, Adarma said the revenue fall it recorded in 2023 partly reflected the decision by its largest consulting client to “insource” the previous year.

According to the administrator’s report, its downturn in performance was in fact driven by the loss of two “significant” customer contracts and the downscaling of other “key” customer relationships, as well as a shift in customer demand towards less profitable platforms.

3. Interpath called in 15 months before collapse

Although Adarma moved to appoint Interpath as administrator on 14 July 2025, Livingbridge first introduced it to the restructuring and advisory firm as far back as April 2024 to undertake a financial forecasts and options review.

As a result of the “deteriorating trading and financial performance”, Interpath was then engaged in March 2025 to review Adarma’s short-term cashflow position.

4. Sale efforts came to nothing

The report detailed how efforts to salvage the company – both before and around the time of administration – failed.

None of the offers Interpath received during efforts in May and June 2025 to explore external sale, refinancing or investment options could be executed, it said.

Interpath began planning for a potential administration on 7 July before sending a Notice of Intention to Appoint Administrators to customers on 10 July.

Its purpose was to explore whether short-term funding could be raised to enable it to temporarily continue trading while customers looked for alternative providers. Despite initial interest, no customer was willing or able to provide the necessary funding, however.

Several parties also expressed interest in acquiring elements of the company after the Notice of Intention to Appoint Administrators was lodged. None of these could provide the immediate funding required, however.

5. Creditor position “uncertain”

Adarma went under owing secured creditor Lloyds Bank £8.6m.

Trade creditors were owed £2.45m, with Scottish Enterprise (£1.51m) by far the largest of these.

Among its vendor trade creditors, CrowdStrike was the only one with a six-figure debt (£327,000).

Claims from employees totalled an estimated £364,000.

It is “uncertain” if there will be sufficient funds to enable a distribution to be made to either Lloyds Bank, employees or HMRC, Interpath said. It is “highly unlikely” that unsecured creditors – ie trade creditors like CrowdStrike – will get anything, it added.

The three staff retained to assist with the administration have now been made redundant, the report added.

CrowdStrike declined to comment further.

Tags: AdarmaCrowdstrikefeatured
Previous Post

Microsoft changes blow hole in SoftwareOne’s Q2 billings

Next Post

Phoenix Software ‘hiring across all roles’ as headcount tops 500

Related Posts

Enrique Lores with Steve Brazier at Canalys
AI

How many AI PCs are actually being shipped?

15 September 2025
Andrew Harman, Academia
M&A

‘Trend-bucking’ Academia hits £138m revenues

15 September 2025
Park Place's HQ in Cleveland, Ohio
M&A

3 things to know as Park Place and Service Express merge

11 September 2025
Ian Kilpatrick
People Moves

Kilpatrick reveals ‘unexpected’ distribution return

11 September 2025
Geoff Kneen, Advania UK
AI

Advania UK CEO: ‘We’re an AI firm’

10 September 2025
Simon Ewington, HPE 2025
Vendor

HPE channel boss says 1,700 partners have moved to unified partner regime

10 September 2025
Mike Norris Group Sales kick off Berlin 2024 (1)
Business

Computacenter returns to UK growth as top line swells by a quarter

9 September 2025
Wedding cake - Pixabay
M&A

Managed print duo Aurora and Right Digital Solutions join forces

8 September 2025
Next Post
Phoenix Software new employees

Phoenix Software ‘hiring across all roles’ as headcount tops 500

Follow Us

IT Channel Oxygen keeps you informed on the UK IT channel and its sustainable transformation. Learn more

  • About
  • Our Team
  • Partner with us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • News
  • Cookie Policy (UK)

© 2025 IT Channel Oxygen

Manage Cookie Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behaviour or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}
No Result
View All Result
  • Oxygen 250
  • Must-Know Distributors
  • Member area
  • KOcycle Zone
  • Big Interview
  • News
  • Indepth
  • About
  • Partner with us

© 2025 IT Channel Oxygen