University of Wales Trinity Saint David faces 'financial uncertainties'
- Published
University of Wales Trinity Saint David is facing financial uncertainty that could cast "significant doubt" over future operations.
Its latest accounts said it might not have enough cash to continue as a going concern if some key sources of income did not materialise.
UWTSD said the risk was remote and it had acted to secure its "resilience".
It confirmed it was looking at 110 possible job cuts and had nearly completed a process to save £6.5m.
The university has received 94 applications for voluntary redundancy and made 16 compulsory redundancies, but said it was working with staff and unions to reduce the need for the latter.
UWTSD is based across three locations in west Wales - Lampeter, Carmarthen and Swansea - and employs 1,500 people. It had more than 10,000 students in 2017-18.
Its latest accounts showed a £30m HSBC bank loan, for its development on Swansea's waterfront, had to be rearranged because it breached one of the conditions.
They warned there was uncertainty over four expected sources of income - if a combination of them do not materialise, it could give rise to a "material uncertainty" over whether the university will have enough cash.
The accounts - for the year to July 2018 - were not finalised until April 2019, said these were:
A large grant towards the cost of a property development was expected in 2018 but had been delayed
A sale of a property, subject to planning permission, had also been delayed
Final savings from a restructuring process were not yet known
Uncertainties, experienced by all universities, about student enrolment and retention
No other Welsh universities have included a similar statement in the audit report in their accounts in recent years, according to higher education finance officials.
A UWTSD spokeswoman said there was no "significant doubt" and the university was "responding to a risk".
She said: "The current uncertainty the university is facing is linked to the timing of it receiving grants. This is a holding issue that the university is dealing with.
"In line with good governance the university has identified the risk, as it is required to do in its financial accounts, and is managing it. The university's future is not uncertain."
The university is behind the Yr Egin complex, external in Carmarthen, the first phase of which houses S4C's headquarters.
It also has a campus in London and a learning centre in Birmingham which opened in March 2018.
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