Succeeding at Succession
Despite the political turmoil, business owners are adapting their succession plans which are driven by age, business performance and other factors.
We explain how a share buyback works when the exit strategy requires the business is passed to family members rather than achieving a sale.
For a family business, an exit strategy often focuses on how to pass it on rather than achieving a trade sale of the company. Usually succession will be ensured in the form of a Vendor Initiated Management Buyout – or ‘VIMBO’ – particularly if those who are to succeed are not just family members.
The VIMBO can also work well in a family deal if Mum and Dad want full value rather than gifting the business, or if they need some sort of carried interest or ongoing income.
In small deals, the variations in the share buyback theme can be very useful in creating a deal structure to suit an individual business and its owners’ needs.
We helped a family business in Suffolk achieve succession using this type of structure. It was a small but sustainably profitable company, and had grown to have branches in Essex, Norfolk and Cambridgeshire. Mum and Dad had been running it for many years, but had involved their two sons as full-time directors.
As the sons took more responsibility in the business, the family felt it was time for them to take full control. The aim was twofold: to achieve the transfer, and to pay out profits to the parents tax efficiently. If the arithmetic stacks up, this can be done using a buyback of shares.
Tax legislation gives favourable tax treatment to an individual when a company purchases some of its own shares, provided certain hoops are jumped through. To outline the steps:
In every deal there are company laws to observe, or else there is a risk an invalid purchase of shares. There are also tax rules to follow, which are often not as so clear cut.
In this case, the two keys matters that needed to be established were that the company was a trading company (for the purposes of BADR), and that the purchase of shares was for ‘bona fide commercial reasons’. The ability to clear this with HMRC in advance is helpful.
Of course there is usually a financing issue too. In this case the company had the cash to pay-out, but what if it hadn’t? There are ways round this though, and indeed this might be a cue to consider a management buyout style structure.
Get in touch; we’ve helped many family companies achieve their exit plans.