Skip Navigation
  • Home
  • About us
  • National sites
  • Myacca
  • Blogs
  • ACCA Discuss
  • ACCA.TV
  • Podcasts
  • Accamail
ACCA - the global body for professional accountants
  • Join Us
  • Students & Affiliates
  • Members
  • Employers
  • Learning Providers
  • General Public
ACCA Homepage < Members < Publications < Accounting and Business magazine < Archive of past issues < 2006 Archive < May 2006
  • CPD
  • E-Learning Gateway
  • Events
  • Publications
  • Auditing and accounting standards
  • Accounting and Business magazine
  • Archive of past issues
  • 2008 Archive
  • 2007 Archive
  • 2006 Archive
  • January 2006
  • February 2006
  • March 2006
  • April 2006
  • May 2006
  • CEOs behaving badly
  • RIP IHT?
  • Technical update
  • Letter from... China
  • Letter from... Ireland
  • Dispatch
  • Australia's red hot commodities
  • Asian regulators grow their adult teeth
  • The skill sharers
  • Closer to the edge of prudence
  • Regulators grow their adult teeth
  • The trauma of SME succession
  • June 2006
  • July/August 2006
  • September 2006
  • October 2006
  • November/December 2006
  • Archive by topic
  • CPD articles
  • AB Direct e-zine
  • ACCA UK magazines and e-newsletters
  • Sector specific booklets
  • Technical factsheets
  • Engage with ACCA
  • Career support
  • New to membership?
  • Other ACCA qualifications
  • Qualifications from our partners
  • Mutual memberships
  • Professional standards & ethics
  • Administering your membership
  • Benevolent Fund

top stories

  • ACCA hosts first international conference for public sector finance professionals ACCA hosts first international conference for public sector finance professionals - opens in a new window
  • ACCA Poland hosts CFO European Summit ACCA Poland hosts CFO European Summit - opens in a new window
  • Have you made your CPD declaration? Have you made your CPD declaration? - opens in a new window
  • CPD 2009 - are you on track? CPD 2009 - are you on track? - opens in a new window


  • See more news more
    See more features more
Send
Print
Share

The trauma of SME succession

by Sarah Perrin
05 May 2006

Topic: Business, SME

For family-owned businesses, handing over to the next generation can be a complex process involving many aspects - not just legal, tax and funding technicalities, but personal issues too. Sarah Perrin explains

Consider a family-owned leisure business based in the south of England, turning over around £25m a year and generating profits of around £650,000. (1) The business has three key parts: a chain of nightclubs, a small UK chain of boutique hotels and a specialist holiday operator. The business had already been passed to the second generation: brothers Bob and Jack James. Both are in their mid to late 40s, with teenage children who may become involved in the business in future.

Bob and Jack have already experienced the problems that can arise as a result of complex ownership structures in family businesses. They recently had to buy out a cousin, and the matter became acrimonious and ended up in court. The question was, should Bob and Jack take action now to try to prevent problems between themselves - and potentially their children - in future?

“The first challenge was to get the two brothers to come to the table and accept they had a potential problem brewing,” says Howard Hackney, head of family business at Grant Thornton. “There was also a sister, who acted as company secretary but didn’t have a shareholding, who kept telling them they should do something; but it still took six months to get them to realise they needed to look at this.” One of the reasons action was advisable was because Bob and Jack found it difficult to work together. They had different management styles, Bob being the louder of the two and prone to ignoring his brother’s opinion.

Hackney’s suggested solution to the brothers was that the separate business operations be split between them. Bob would take ownership of the nightclub and hotel operations, and Jack the specialist tour operator. This would not only allow each of them to run their operations in their own way, but it would also make things easier in future should they want to pass their respective businesses on to their own children. However, they could still draw on each other’s commercial acumen, as Bob remained a director of Jack’s company and vice versa. The proposed split meant Bob would need to buy Jack out, as his combined operations had a higher value than Jack’s.

Establishing value

The next step, once the brothers accepted they needed to take action, was to establish the company’s value. “One brother thought it was worth around £2m, and the other thought about £4m,” Hackney says. “In the end they settled on a compromise figure of £3m.” The role of the father, no longer active in the business but whose opinion both brothers respected, was helpful, as he gave his own valuation. “The brothers saw the father as an independent sounding board, and so his valuation provided a ballpark figure to get the discussions going.”

The next issue was to raise the finance Bob needed to buy Jack out. “We had to go to banks and hire purchase companies to find the best package,” explains Hackney. “This involved putting the business case together and demonstrating that Bob’s part of the business was profitable on an ongoing basis.”

Inevitably, there were also a number of technical tax issues to be addressed. There are two technical ways to achieve a business buy-out or reorganisation of this kind, known as a share buy-in or a reconstruction. “Both have clearance and application procedures,” Hackney says. “In this case, there was insufficient retained profits in the business to go down the buy-in route. Therefore the reconstruction, which is more costly, was the only option. We then had to get confirmation from the Revenue that it [the reconstruction] was not designed to avoid tax.”

The advisers also needed to determine whether there was any problem to do with financial assistance. Under the Companies Act, if a company uses its own assets to buy itself, that is considered to be financial assistance and illegal. “The whole deal can be voided at any later stage,” Hackney explains. “To get round that, you have to go through what’s called a whitewash procedure. The directors put together forecasts and sign a statement to say the business can continue trading for the next 12 months.” The company’s auditors must also give an opinion saying this statement is fair and reasonable. “That can add a significant extra cost, perhaps £10,000 or so, just to get over a Companies Act technicality, and one which will be removed in the next Companies Act,” Hackney notes. “Fortunately, in this case, the lawyers came to the decision that it was not financial assistance, so no whitewash report was required.”

From the time the brothers agreed to sit down together and discuss their problems, achieving the business reorganisation took around 12 months to complete. “It took a significant amount of work, and required the brothers to face some personal issues, but the end result puts both in a better position,” Hackney says. “They have faced up to their succession issues and will be better positioned to pass their businesses on to the next generation when the time comes.”

a typical succession situation

The business: a £2.5m turnover company in the food preparation sector making around £300,000 profit before tax.

The scenario: the founder and his wife, who own the business 50/50 between them, are looking to retire. However, due to some bad investments in the past, the business is their sole source of retirement income. They are currently running the business with their daughter, who is increasingly the driving force in it and is keen to take over. The parents and daughter each earn about £100,000 a year from the business. The daughter is soon to be married, and her husband wants to get more involved too.

Proposed solution: the business is cash rich. Around £600,000 can be stripped from the business and paid into a pension scheme. When grossed up for tax relief, this should provide relatively secure retirement income of around £70,000 a year for the parents. The business can then seek funding on its own account to support its future operations.
Stripping out the cash means that the value of the company is significantly reduced, being determined solely by its income-generating ability rather than any net assets. The daughter completes the transfer of ownership by buying the shares over a number of years. The price to be paid would be fixed at a level that reflects the effort put in and, hence, value already created by the daughter. The technical way to achieve this is slightly complex, especially as any agreement between the parties may be voidable should there be insufficient retained reserves in the company.
If the parents are wary of their daughter and future son-in-law’s ability to continue running the business successfully, they might want to put the shares in the company into a discretionary trust. In this way the daughter will know that she will own the company at some stage, but not have full control in terms of voting rights, which will remain with the trustees (probably the parents).

Source: Grant Thornton


Reference
(1) Some details have been changed, but the key issues are real.

Sarah Perrin is an accountant and writer.

Back to top

 
  • Contact us
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility
  • Advertising
  • Site map
© 2009 ACCA