INFORMAL
If you are experiencing financial difficulty or creditor pressure, it may be possible to agree payment terms on an informal basis with your creditors. You may require some assistance to make these arrangements and the best way to approach these. Please feel free to contact Michael Royce to discuss this further.
INDIVIDUAL VOLUNTARY ARRANGEMENT (“IVA”)
Advantages
Disadvantages
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07921 577752
DEBT RELIEF ORDER (“DRO”)
A debt relief order may be appropriate if you meet the following criteria:
• you are unable to pay your debts;
• you have debts of £20,000 or less;
• you do not have surplus income after expenditure of more than £50 per month;
• you don’t own your home;
• your assets are worth less than £1,000 (some assets are not included)
• you don’t own a motor vehicle worth £1,000 or more (if your car is specially adapted because you have a disability, this is not included)
• you haven’t had a DRO in the last six years and aren’t going through another formal insolvency procedure, such as bankruptcy or an individual voluntary arrangement;
• you have lived, had a property, or worked in England or Wales in the last three years.
If you wish to discuss a DRO, please do not hesitate to contact Michael Royce to arrange a meeting to discuss this further free of charge.
BANKRUPTCY
Advantages
The main benefits to a bankruptcy are as follows:
Disadvantages
The main negatives are as follows:
COMPANY VOLUNTARY ARRANGEMENT (“CVA”)
A CVA is a formal agreement between the Company and its creditors. This may be appropriate when the Company is experiencing cash flow difficulties but has a viable business model. For example, the Company experiences a large bad debt which impacts on the businesses ability to meet its own liabilities, the CVA would give the company breathing space to defer the payment of its own liabilities – this may also give some agreed debt forgiveness (partial write off with the Company’s creditors agreement).
Proposals are drafted and sent to the Company creditors outlining what contributions the Company is proposing to pay over a period of time and what creditors expect to receive and when. Creditors are then asked to vote whether they accept or reject what is proposed.
If the required number of creditors accept the proposal, this will be binding on all creditors.
A CVA has advantages and disadvantages to other insolvency procedures, and a few are identified below.
If you wish to discuss proposing a CVA with the Company’s creditors, please do not hesitate to contact Michael Royce to arrange a meeting to discuss this further free of charge.
Advantages
• The Company maintains control of its assets
• The costs of a CVA are significantly lower than an Administration
• There are no investigations undertaken by the Supervisor of the CVA
• If the company has a particular licence or agreement in place that the company is unable to transfer or buy-back such as an Operators Licence in the haulage trade, the CVA enables to continue the business with no interruptions or delays
• Directors remain in control of the business
• Stops any legal action taken by creditors once the CVA is accepted
Disadvantages
• Suppliers may withdraw credit terms and may cause the company issues in obtaining credit in the future
• A CVA does get registered at Companies House
• If the company suffers a loss during the period, the CVA propose is rigid and may not offer an element of flexibility to amend the terms which will ultimately lead to its failure and probably be wound up