Dev / Stage environment, db: Server=VMFF77140;Database=penningtonsLawStage;User Id=penningtonsLawStaging;Password=Thb66$rfmp5$$rf!h;encrypt=false;TrustServerCertificate=true;
Posted: 25/05/2023
As the economic outlook remains uncertain, businesses of all sizes and their boards are experiencing mounting pressure from various sources. In particular, directors of companies in financial difficulty face a number of challenges. Primarily, they must decide what they can do to keep the company in business without running the risk of committing an offence or incurring personal liability, and at what stage they must stop trading.
This article outlines some key issues and strategies that directors should consider when times are tough.
The Companies Act 2006 codified directors’ duties to clarify what is expected of directors and provides a single reference source setting out their duties. It is well established that directors are required to consider the interests of creditors of the company when the company is insolvent or approaching insolvency.
Consequently, as a company heads towards potential insolvency, directors should be aware that their duty to the members of the company to promote its success may need to be modified with a view to minimising the loss to the company’s creditors. Some of the most difficult decisions may need to be taken when the company is on the verge of insolvency; the so-called ‘twilight zone’, which begins when the company starts to encounter financial difficulties, such as cash flow problems and pressure from lenders in relation to banking facilities.
The directors’ conduct during this period will come under particular scrutiny. The duty to promote the company’s long-term success for the benefit of its members may in such a case potentially conflict with a director’s duty to the company’s creditors in the short-term.
Choosing whether or not to follow a particular survival plan when it is uncertain if that plan will turn the company around or lead to an insolvent winding up will be difficult. This is a particular dilemma for directors of companies which have strong management and a sound business model but are suffering from an unexpected or sudden downturn in business. Once a company is in the ‘twilight zone’ it is essential that directors err on the side of caution and direct their paramount concerns to the interests of the creditors.
To read more about directors’ duties and responsibilities, click here.
In addition to any liability that may be incurred by a director for breach of duty under the Companies Act 2006, there are a number of potential legal remedies that are available against directors. However, these will generally only be invoked after the company has gone into insolvent liquidation (where the realisations from the assets of the company are insufficient to cover the liabilities of the company and the expenses of the winding up).
These include (among others):
Directors will continually need to consider if there is a reasonable prospect of the company avoiding going into insolvent liquidation. The board will therefore need to remain well advised and have available to it reliable financial information to closely monitor the company’s financial position. In particular:
For further information, please get in touch with your usual PMC contact.
Our highly regarded corporate team provides clear, pragmatic and practical advice to businesses large and small from the UK and around the globe on the corporate transactions and the legal issues they face. To find out more about our corporate team please click here.
This article is intended to provide a summary of the law in this area as at May 2023 and does not constitute legal advice. Should you wish to obtain advice based on specific facts and circumstances, please contact us.
Email Matthew
+44 (0)20 7753 7521
Email Marina
+44 (0)20 7457 3022