Debt finance Flashcards
Three main types of loans
- Overdraft: contract between bank and business which allow business to go overdrawn on its current account.
- Term loan: fixed amoun of money and for specified period, may be secured or unsecured, bilateral or syndicated
- Revolving credit facilities: bank agrees to make available a maximum amount of moeny to business throughout the agreed period of teh revolving credit facility.
Pros and cons of overdraft facility
- Pros: flexible source of finance, few formalities
- Cons: repayment may be demanded at any time by the bank, expensive way to borrow, usually insecured/
- The business have to pay a fee for overdraft. Interest charge by reference to base rate, it generally charged on compound basis (unpaid interest added to capital- implied unless agreed otherwise)
Pros and cons of term loan
- Pros: it gives certainty, repayable on demand, borrower has greater control because bank can only request repayment under the terms of contract
- Cons: time and expense in negotiating legal docs and once repaid money cannot be reborrowed by the business.
Pros and cons of revolving loan (facility agreement)
- Pros: flexible means of borrowing, possible to reduce total amount of interest payable by reducing borrowing
- Cons: Time and expense, high fees charged.
Key contract terms
- Payment of money to the borrower: committed facilities, availability period
- Repayment and prepayment:
a. repay the wholeloan at the end (bullet payment)
b. in equal instalsment over the term (amortisation)
c. in unequal instalsment with final being largest (ballon repayment) - Interest rate: fixed or floating
- Express covenants
- Implied covenants: terms may be implied by courts but power is limited, only if it were necessary to give business efficacy.
- Event of default
Debentures
- A loan registered at Companies House. It gives lender security over the borrower assets.
- Only companies and LLPs can enter into debentures.
Terminology
- CA2006 uses charges as an umbrella term for most types of security (charges includes mortgage).
- Law of Property Act 1925 uses term mortgage as umbrelly term for security in Act, defining this to “include any charge or lien on any property”.
- IA 1986 defines security as any mortgage, charge, lien or other security.
Regimes applicable to sole traders, partnership and LLP
- Sole traders and partnerships cannot grant floating charges, only fixed charges. They must be registered with HM Land Registry if over land
- LLP can grant float charges and fixed charges, registration process is similar to the companies.
Due diligence before lending
- Inspecting AoA, search companies records at CH and reques copies of board resolutions:
* Check any restriction on company granting security
* Check that directors have authority to act on half of company, and have been properly appointed as directors - Search company’s record of CH to see if any charge has been registered:
* date of creation
* amount secured
* property subject to charge
* who hold the charge - Search Land Registry:
* check land title
* any preexisting charges - Search Intellectual Property office for title to IP
- Conduct winding up search by phone at the Companies Court.
Mortgages
- Highest form of security
- Mortgage (exception for land) involves transfer of legal ownership from mortagor to mortgagee, although mortgage gives the lender right to immediate possession of property, this held in reserve and exercised only if borrower defaults. Title will transferred back to borrower when money is repaid
- A separate mortgage must be created over each asset.
- A mortgage over land is actually a charge by deed expressed by way of legal mortgage. The rights of mortgagee to land include the rights to take possession of land and to sell it.
Charges
- Form of security that does not transfer legal ownership, and does not give the chargee the right to immediate possession of property.
- two types of charges that LLP and company can grant: fixed charge and floating charge.
Fixed charge
- Taken over machinery or shares, etc.
- The lender has control of assets: chargor will not be permitted to dispose of asset without charge holder consent
- The chargor will have the right to sell asset and be paid out from proceeds of sale before any other claimant.
- Can create more than one fixed charge over the same asset.
Floating charges
- Secures a group of assets, such as stock which is constantly changing.
- possible to create more than 1 floating charge over same group of assets
- Basic features of floating charge:
a. Consist of an equitable charge over whole or a class of asset of company
b. Assets constantly changing
c. Company/LLP retains freedom to deal with assets in the ordinary course of business until charge “crystallises”. - Assets subkect to floating charge therefore identified generically such as stock or undertaking (note that it is possible to take floating charge over all of company’s undertaking, which would be all of assets)
- Floating charge automaticall crystallise when:
a. Chargor go into receivership
b. chargor goes into liquidation
c. charger ceases to trade
d. any other events specified in the charge document. - On cristallisation, chargor can no longer deal with the assets covered by the charge. In effect floating charge turn into fixed assets.
Can book debts be charged?
Yes, book debts are money owed to the company/LLP by its debtor.
As an asset book debt may be charged.
Book debts can be charged in both fixed or floating charge:
1. Fixed charge where charge holder has control over both debts and the proceeds once they were paid
2. Floating charge: the company is able to use the proceeds from book debts for its business purpose.
Pros and cons of floating charge
Pros:
1. allow chargor to deal with secured assets on day to day basis
2. allow chargor to maximise the amount it is able to borrow
3. floating charge may be taken over the whole of company/LLP
Cons:
1.fixed charge taking priority over a floating charge over the same assets
2.from lender: the chargor allowed to deal with assets
3.from lender: certain other creditors have the right to claim money from the proceeds of sale of the assets covered by floating charge if company becomes insolvent. These include “preferential” creditors, who take priority over the holder of a floating charge but not over fixed charge.
4.In certain circumstances, under s245 IA 1986, liquidator or administrator of an insolvent company may apply to have floating charge set aside