Minimise debts by ceasing to trade
Note: you should not attempt to advise a company on ceasing to trade. This is an area that requires specialist advice.
If a client is still running a business but is seriously in debt, s/he should consider whether or not to continue trading. There is no point in doing so if this is just increasing indebtedness and the situation is unlikely to change. In some cases, continuing to trade in this situation could become an offence at a later stage if the business is a limited company.
Note: From 1 March 2020 to 30 September 2020 and from 26 November 2020 to 30 June 2021, the rules for this type of offence were suspended by the government due to the COVID-19 pandemic to help company directors continue to trade during this period.
This is a highly complex area and specialist help should be sought from a small business adviser – eg, via Business Debtline or the business’s own accountants. The process may be helped by drawing up a business financial statement. It is usually recommended that this should be for a period of no longer than three months, unless the business is a seasonal one.
Do not attempt a business income and expenditure list for a limited company. In this case, the director of the limited company should obtain monthly drawings figures from the company’s accountant that can be used as income on a personal financial statement.
The business financial statement is similar to the personal financial statement drawn up for the client (see here), except that it deals with the income and outgoings of the business. •All the business’s assets. This should include equipment or machinery with its approximate resale value. This will be different from amounts shown in professionally produced accounts, where the ’book value’ is based on the original cost of an item and its theoretical life. The greatest asset of a business may be the work it has in hand and the debts owed to it. These are difficult to value. The likelihood of a debt owed to the business being paid must be assessed and the contractual status of work in hand measured. For instance, a painter and decorator may have agreed in the autumn to paint the exterior of an existing customer’s house the following spring. If the customer loses her/his job during the winter, in the absence of any binding agreement the work may not materialise.
A realistic value for any premises or leases on premises that are owned should be estimated – eg, by a local estate agent. Note: valuations of business premises are not usually free of charge (as they are for domestic premises). The client’s estimate of value may therefore have to be sufficient. Business premises are particularly susceptible to a fall in value caused by developments elsewhere in the locality. For instance, the opening of a new supermarket could possibly cause a collapse in the business of a corner shop and potentially a fall in the value of its premises. In this way, a reduction in the market which causes a business to flounder can also reduce the value of its assets, which would otherwise have been its major protection from financial problems. Valuing a lease is complex and can only be accurately assessed by a professional. Leased business premises are not valued in the same way as domestic premises. The shorter the period that the lease has left to run, the less likely it is to be of any value. Note: if there is no one prepared to take over the lease, this might represent a liability rather than an asset (because the client/tenant remains liable for the rent until the lease expires).
Items like cars should always be valued at the price likely to be obtained at auction rather than a price an optimist might expect to get from a private sale. There are various used car price guides available online and from newsagents that give a trade price for reasonably modern cars, and these can be used as a guide.
•Likely income to the business. If the client is using a business financial statement to help forecast the future viability of the business, it may help to draw up a list of payments that the business might expect to receive based on a conservative, but realistic, assessment. Note the dates when payments can be expected.
•Expenditure by the business. A similar, dated list of payments that the business is required to make must be drawn up next. This must include, for example, bank interest and charges, lease or rental charges for both property and equipment, regular bills for fuel and other services (eg, telephones and waste disposal), payments required by suppliers, VAT payments, wages to any staff, and estimated tax and national insurance (NI). Some expenditure can be split between business and personal use – eg, travel costs. You should have some knowledge of how to complete a business financial statement in order to do this – it may be appropriate to refer the client to a specialist adviser.
The excess income over expenditure gives a rough idea of how much is available for the businessperson to pay her/himself in ’drawings’. If there is no foreseeable likelihood of anything being available, this indicates that trading may need to come to an end. However, the client must obtain expert assistance before taking such a major step, because items like liability for tax or payments due under a lease, which can be very complex, could make the difference between viability and insolvency. A lay adviser is not generally qualified to make this decision.
If a client is trading as a partner, the decision to cease trading may not be hers/his alone. If one partner wants to cease trading but others do not, s/he should ensure that s/he has formally severed her/his partnership agreement in order to limit her/his liability to those debts that have accrued at that time. S/he should try to gain the agreement of creditors and ex-partners, preferably in writing, that s/he is not liable for any debts which subsequently come to light and which relate to the period of her/his membership of the partnership. If a partnership is informal and there is, therefore, no prescribed way of leaving it, legal advice should be sought so that an agreement can be drawn up to terminate it. If possible, this should include an agreement that those remaining in the business will ’indemnify’ (ie, agree to pay instead of) those leaving against claims against them for past actions (or bills).
Sometimes, informal business partnerships exist between people who have personal relationships, such as married or cohabiting couples. It is often the custom that either party can enter into contracts on behalf of the partnership (for which both partners become jointly and severely liable). In such a case, it is important that suppliers are informed that the partnership no longer exists, if this is desired – eg, if a personal relationship ends and so a couple cease trading together.