A Members Voluntary Liquidation, or MVL, is an insolvency process for solvent companies, where all creditors will be paid in full and the surplus assets are distributed to the shareholders, often with advantageous tax benefits.
With the Chancellor looking at ways to raise taxes due to the Coronavirus Pandemic, many directors and shareholders of owner-managed businesses are taking the view that it is better to get their hard-earned funds out of their businesses before any changes, and potential increases in tax, are made.
Declaration of Solvency
The first step to place any company into Members Voluntary Liquidation (however it is normally done on the same day as holding the shareholders meeting below) is to prepare a Declaration of Solvency.
A Declaration of Solvency is essentially a summary of the Company’s assets and liabilities together with a statement which says that the directors have reviewed the company’s financials and are fully confident that the company can pay all of its liabilities, in full, within one year.
The Declaration of Solvency is then sworn by a majority of the directors (or by both of them if there are only two) in front of a local solicitor either physically, or remotely due to the current coronavirus restrictions.
The Declaration of Solvency is a very important document and it is a criminal offence to swear a materially incorrect or misleading declaration.
Shareholders Meeting
In small owner-managed businesses the directors and shareholders are usually one and the same. Accordingly, the directors resolve, byway of a board meeting, to call a meeting of shareholders to pass a special resolution to Wind Up the company and for it to be placed into Members Voluntary Liquidation.
Normally, a Special Resolution requires 14 days notice however if 90% of the shareholders agree this 14 day notice period can be waived, which makes it possible in owner-managed businesses to undertake the entire process of calling and holding a meeting of shareholders the same day.
At the Shareholders meeting, the shareholders also appoint their choice of liquidator and pass the necessary resolutions to agree with the costs of the liquidation.
Practicalities
In order to make the process as simple as possible, it is always best to agree with a date for the Company to be placed into Liquidation. On agreeing with the date to place the company into Liquidation you would also have to book an appointment with a local solicitor to swear the Declaration of Solvency.
Once the documents have been sworn the Company is formally in liquidation and the process of liquidating the Company and distributing the assets back to the shareholders can begin.
Entrepreneurs Relief
Entrepreneurs Relief, or Business Asset Disposal Relief as it is now called is a tax relief whereby monies are withdrawn from a company, via a capital distribution in a Liquidation, are charged at 10% as opposed to the higher capital gains tax rates, or even higher income tax rates.
This can generate a significant tax saving for shareholders.
In the last budget, it was feared that the Chancellor was going to remove this relief completely, but instead, he reduced the lifetime limit to £1million. With talk of increases to the capital gains tax rates and raising further taxes across the board, it is no wonder that Insolvency Practitioners have seen a significant increase in the number of clients wanting to place their companies into Members Voluntary Liquidation.
The Company can then be placed into Members Voluntary Liquidation. The Liquidator will make a capital distribution to the shareholders and those shareholders should then make a claim on their personal tax return for the monies that are received, or the value of assets that are received, to be taxed at a rate of 10%.
For further information, including a video explaining how an MVL works, you can visit our How to Place a Company into Members Voluntary Liquidation page on our website.