The Scotsman

Doubts rising over CVA effectiven­ess

Using CVA to discard liabilitie­s is coming under critical scrutiny as collapse and insolvenci­es rise, says Michael Thomson

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Company voluntary arrangemen­ts (CVAS) are very much en vogue. Why? Growth of online shopping, Brexit uncertaint­y, increased export costs, drop in consumer confidence and spend, increases in business rates, rising labour costs and long-term inflexible lease costs. All of these been cited as factors contributi­ng to financial difficulti­es for bricks and mortar operators in the UK retail, fashion and casual dining sectors.

In 2018, these sectors have seen huge uptake by tenant companies as a means to secure more amenable lease terms or to discard lease liabilitie­s altogether. In response to the wave of retailers and restaurant chains proposing CVAS, doubts about their effectiven­ess and questions about their treatment of landlords, trade associatio­ns for the retail sector and insolvency profession are subjecting the CVA process to scrutiny.

A CVA is a process used by a company to compromise liabilitie­s with its creditors. The company proposes the CVA to its creditors and if the required majority vote in favour, the CVA is implemente­d by the directors under the supervisio­n of an insolvency practition­er. As long as the required majority vote in favour, the CVA binds all creditors entitled to vote. In CVAS dealing with lease liabilitie­s, market practice has built up to split leases into three separate categories: leases for profitable units, which are left largely untouched by the CVA; leases for marginal units, upon which a significan­t rent reduction will be imposed; and leases for unprofitab­le units, which will be terminated.

So there are winners and losers. With the number of landlords potentiall­y adversely impacted (the recent House of Fraser CVA proposal, for example, proposes the closure of 31 of 59 stores), there has been inevitable criticism of the practice that has built up to use CVAS to discard lease liabilitie­s.

This is particular­ly so when the success rate of CVAS on the high street has been regarded as poor. BHS, JJB Sports, Focus DIY and Oddbins are all examples of previously successful names attempting to go down this route, only to experience subsequent collapse and insolvency.

Failure is often attributed to the absence of a strong restructur­ing plan in the proposal, insufficie­nt capital or debt to fund the restructur­ing plan (where one is envisaged by the CVA), or lack of experience of management in restructur­ing to deliver the plan during the process.

R3 (the trade associatio­n for insolvency, restructur­ing, advisory, and turnaround profession­als in the UK) has recently researched and reported on the effectiven­ess and legitimacy of CVAS as a business rescue tool and reasons for their success or failure.

R3 suggests a number of reforms to improve perception and transparen­cy of the process. These range from capping the maximum duration of CVAS, to standardis­ing their terms and conditions, and increasing clarity on the duties of directors and insolvency practition­ers in proposing and administer­ing the arrangemen­ts. R3 also suggests measures to increase the prospects of success. These include better engagement with public sector creditors (who traditiona­lly might have refused to support CVA proposals) and making available a moratorium (ie a stay on creditor action) while the proposal is being prepared and considered to stop creditors taking enforcemen­t action and potentiall­y frustratin­g the process.

The British Property Federation has also called for a rethink. Representi­ng the interests of the UK residentia­l and commercial real estate com-

panies, its approach has been to call for an urgent, independen­t review. Citing a need for property owners looking after savers’ and pensioners’ money to protect against unfair action that penalises their interests, the BPF has called for the review to tackle what it perceives to be a lack of transparen­cy and regulation, and discrimina­tion between different creditors.

The wave of CVAS in retail and casual dining is not showing any signs of abating. The more that are proposed, the more likely it seems that landlords and other interested parties will call for change. Insolvency bodies and regulators will also want to protect the perception of the profession.

It seems likely that if the surge in popularity of CVAS (at least in terms of uptake) continues, there will be a clear need to decide if they remain open for business, or need to be closed down.

Michael Thomson is a Partner with Burness Paull LLP

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 ??  ?? 0 The recent House of Fraser CVA proposal, for example, proposes the closure of 31 of 59 stores
0 The recent House of Fraser CVA proposal, for example, proposes the closure of 31 of 59 stores

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