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If you need a BB loan to do that, is the business gonna last much longer.
I think you would need to take some professional advice on this to get a definitive answer that you could have some confidence in / indemnity if the wolves come knocking later.Can a bounce back loan be used to repay yourself money you lent to the company?
so, a directors loan TO the company?
thanks
Sure, but it's not provided as a means for you to de-risk your own personal capital out of the business (particularly not pre-COVID loans), it is for economic benefit to the business. There's no ambiguity in what you sign up to - that was verbatim out of the Govt section of the agreement - you can choose to re-interpret of course as fits your motive...!I think there is more nuance involved in this case. We were forced to look down whether people wanted to or not. If it wernt for the BBL, the exact same amount of working capital would be at risk anyway. The government has accepted this responsibility hence the introduction of a wide range of finance packages & support.
Replacing some of a DL with a BBL I see absolutely no conflict in this as long as all monies are repaid.
Of course, if you pay it back it is very likely no-one is going to care much about anything. But surely one of the big reasons folk might be trying to take their own money out of the business is because they're concerned about the risk to their own capital (they may already think they're on the skids and this is a way to settle themselves up at the taxpayer's expense).
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I don't think there was any steer as to the current state of the OP's company; it is quite possible they are in precisely that situation . My initial reply was to them, and wasn't insinuating anything about your own position.I think the majority of people are concerned about business outlook considering we've just had one of the most damaging events to happen in the last 50 years. There are of course a minority percentage who it won't effect due to their sector or vast reserves of capital (i.e the big boys).
I also very much agree with Mr D. Refinancing, which I believe I've read is OK is essentially all that it is.
Taking the loan and folding knowing you were barely solvent before is of course another kettle of fish which shouldn't be conflated with this particular topic.
Interesting. So I'm assuming if all trade creditors can be paid by normal means and the only external cash funding being used is in the form of a DL then there is no issue with being preferential as you have a grand total choice of 1.
I like the article consistently pointing to take professional advice, with a number provided
@Mr D I don't buy "me not having to take money out of business by other means" as an economic benefit. The company can either afford to pay you dividends or it cannot. I guess if it has a big director's loan, it cannot... And a BBLS doesn't add to the pot you can take dividends out of...
So the argument is a psychological one; that having loaned the money into the business as a director's loan you as a director would be disinclined to actually spend it on the business (!) but that if the money is on someone else's risk you'd be more likely to spend it on something that might benefit the business? This kind of implies the director's loan funds are sat there doing nothing (in which case, they could have been taken out anyway) - and not actually spent already!I think we can agree that even marginally, you are more likely to make investments with capital which is backed by elsewhere to procure staff/stock etc in these trying times. That's where the economic benefit of these loans really shine.
re: HMRC, if payments are made to ALL trade creditors I don't see any issue with falling foul of any of the restrictions.
Wasn't thinking about dividends. More than one way someone can receive money from a company, commonly for directors its by way of wages.
Was talking about the common thing when a business goes under, the director has taken money to be able to live... what with mortgage / rent / food/ kids etc.
Rather than what is ideal, instead what actually happens.
I think this has been covered elsewhere though. You also wouldn't be allowed to take a BBLS and pay it out to you in the form of salary increase. (well, you could do it now, the cash is in your company account and you do what you think you need to, but it doesn't mean it wouldn't be a problem later).
But surely, paying it as wages (over however long that took based on whatever salary level you'd set previously) is better for the business than paying back a loan... the wages are offset against income, whereas paying back the loan is a zero sum game.
But I guess if your asking the question as the OP was, you clearly already know that you could take the cash and pay it for whatever purpose you think you could - I mean no-one is supervising what you do with your money on a transaction by transaction basis - we've not yet descended into full-on police state yet (though it may be coming - Bournemouth it appears may be the first to fall!)Pretty much anything can be a problem later. Depending if the company ever gets investigated.
If it doesn't then no one else knows of the 'problem', if indeed it even is a problem.
The question of wages versus DL being taken out is one of risk. You and I may decide to accept that risk, someone else may decide not to accept that risk. Is one decision better for the individual than another? That's impossible for us to say on a forum.
But I guess if your asking the question as the OP was, you clearly already know that you could take the cash and pay it for whatever purpose you think you could - I mean no-one is supervising what you do with your money on a transaction by transaction basis - we've not yet descended into full-on police state yet (though it may be coming - Bournemouth it appears may be the first to fall!)
The OPs question can't have been on the point of can they actually make the payment, but on the subtleties of whether it is "right" to, and whether they may have their feet in the fire later.
Probably without knowing a lot more about the current state of their business than they might be willing to disclose on public forum it's not possible to really give a very considered opinion, but I've not seen anything to say this is definitely OK.
As another poster commented, if the co already has a directors loan, and has taken advantage of BBLS (so meeting the test of impacted by Coronavirus) it seems it might not be on a rock solid foundation, and in such situations there can be comebacks to directors.
Attitude for risk clearly comes into it. I don't have much appetite myself.
Do you know they had a director's loan in place they're paying off with their CBILs or BBLS? If not, hard to see the relevance.Just because a business qualifies for the loan and gets it does not mean the business is going under. How they are placed to engage with customers, who their customers are, demand for the products and services etc.
Lockdown affected a massive percentage of businesses. Some will recover, some will do very well out of it.
Saw on the news a company called Games Workshop, based in Nottingham, has done so well its giving back the help it had from government. Besides getting tens of thousands in free advertising presumably the company has boomed.
And with no help from PETA over fur this time either.
Businesses may well boom the rest of the year if selling the right goods or services.
Do you know they had a director's loan in place they're paying off with their CBILs or BBLS? If not, hard to see the relevance.
Just because a business qualifies for the loan and gets it does not mean the business is going under. How they are placed to engage with customers, who their customers are, demand for the products and services etc.
... and if that is the reason, it would be against the terms of the BBL. The BBL is to benefit the biz, not the director.That to me says they want to change the risk. Says nothing about the viability or the potential of the business to make money over time.
Insolvency practitioner, about as much use as a chocolate teapot.
we've had plenty of bad debt over the years, they get their cut and quickly tell all creditors even those with charges on assets, "sorry, nothing left"
directors start up a new company the next day. This isn't a hypothetical scenario, personally witnessed it many times I'm affraid to say.
I'm assuming this happened after all avenues have been exhausted. We have had experience with the dregs of the business community who knowingly traded into the ground for personal gain
My point being you stopped trading once you knew insolvency was or was about to happen, rather than continue to procure products or services using trade credit with the aim of transfering them, which is far too common now days.
The legislation states that the business can use the loan to refinance other debts. If the company owes money elsewhere, the business can pay these off with the bbl. Therefore repaying a DL to the company is a debt and legitimately being repaid by the bbl. As long as you have essentially put the money into the company, the company is not just giving you money, its repaying the DL.. and these are not excluded from the legislation.. any loan can be repaid by the company with a bbl.Can a bounce back loan be used to repay yourself money you lent to the company?
so, a directors loan TO the company?
thanks
This is half the story though. If there are other debts than the DL, and the business subsequntly folds, questions can be raised about the potential for the to have been misfeasance in making preference payments to the DL ahead of other debts. Same can also apply if a BBL is used to only clear loans which have a personal guarantee element.The legislation states that the business can use the loan to refinance other debts. If the company owes money elsewhere, the business can pay these off with the bbl. Therefore repaying a DL to the company is a debt and legitimately being repaid by the bbl. As long as you have essentially put the money into the company, the company is not just giving you money, its repaying the DL.. and these are not excluded from the legislation.. any loan can be repaid by the company with a bbl.
Expect to see Prosecuting Solicitors engaged to try and reclaim the preferred money repaid to the Director.
I guess it probably depends on when they fold. If you folded at the moment there's no indication it's going to be treated any different to any other insolvency. Who knows what it will look like 6 months to a year down the line though.Said directors will be protected by the sheer volume of these cases. Safety in numbers.
Arguably as a tax payer you should care a bit as you've subsidised someone getting a cheap loan, but agree, in the scale of things, if the intent was just to use it as cheap finance, and it does get paid back, it's a relatively minor infraction... (I'm sure the banks wouldn't see it that way though if they've missed out on perhaps double or triple the amount of interest on a £50K loan)As already stated if the BBL's are repaid who cares what they were used for.