Advancing credit to financially distressed companies – warning signals for suppliers and creditors?

25th August 2021

Advancing credit to financially distressed companies – warning signals for suppliers and creditors?

Continued pressure on business and world economies due to the ongoing battle with the Covid pandemic continues into the second half of 2021 and looks set to continue into 2022. With recent unrest in parts of the country, many businesses had to shut down, with many of these failing to reopen.

Recently published figures by STATS SA reflect an increasingly worrying trend of increased liquidations of companies and insolvencies for individuals. The total number of liquidations of companies increased by 21,5% in the first seven months of 2021 as compared with the first seven months of 2020. Further, insolvencies of individuals increased by 784,4 % (from 32 to 283 cases) in June 2021, as compared with May 2021. This is a staggering increase and where South Africans are clearly feeling the strain of ongoing shutdowns, and constraints imposed by deteriorating trading conditions caused by the impact of Covid-19 on our economy.

Creditors and suppliers of goods and services to companies in distress or which are on the cusp of insolvency have difficult decisions to make. Defaulting companies might already be struggling to pay existing debt, and where, without ongoing lines of credit, will not be able to continue trading. Management and credit controllers will need to keep a very careful watch on their customers and establish whether there are any warning signals of looming insolvency. Factors which might point towards a pending liquidation and an increased risk for a default include –

Often, when any one or more of these warning signals are prevalent, there is a fairly good chance that the company will have to file for business rescue, or alternatively for liquidation.

Chapter 6 of the Companies Act No. 73 of 2008 ("the Act") introduced mechanisms to rescue those companies that are trading in financial distress and by way of the business rescue process. Suppliers and creditors that do not understand Chapter 6 of the Act and the intricacies of the business rescue mechanism, place themselves under severe risk in the event that one of their major customers (debtors) files for the business rescue process and where the rescue legislation intervenes and complicates ongoing business and trading relationships.

In South Africa, 2021 has seen several companies going out of business and with many turning to the business rescue process. South African creditors should realise that business rescue (as a restructuring tool for severely distressed companies) generally provides a "better" outcome than liquidation, and thus should seriously consider supporting the process. Unsecured suppliers/creditors facing the liquidation of its customer would in all likelihood receive a zero (or negligible) dividend after all secured and preferent creditors have been paid in liquidation. Generally, business rescue dividends should result in a higher return for creditors than would result in a liquidation.

It has however been recently reported that certain suppliers/creditors are becoming increasingly unhappy with the level of pay-outs/dividends that are generally being made available in the formal business rescue process. An example of this is the recent court action instituted by ten Edgars suppliers and in order to improve their low pay out and further to obtain clarity as to why the clothing retailer collapsed. Suppliers are unhappy with the business rescue dividend currently on offer and where they are owed a collective R109 million and where the plan offers approximately R7million to them as a pay-out. Secured creditors such as landlords and banks will receive a business rescue dividend of 19 cents in the Rand, whereas clothing and product suppliers, a pay-out of 6 cents in the Rand. The company and its business rescue practitioners have defended their position and where they reiterate that the business rescue plan was approved by 80% of creditors voting in accordance with the value of their claims as far back as June 2020. As this litigation has just commenced, one will have to follow the outcome in due course.

Overall, the South African business rescue process is robust and effective and can result in positive outcomes for all stakeholders. In 2021/2022, we expect to see continued support on the part of suppliers and creditors for the business rescue process and which should continue to see companies being rescued and where there is a sustainable business model for ongoing trading. Ultimately, a company which is rescued provides an ongoing source of revenue for those suppliers that have supported a rescue process and which results in the survival of its trading partner into the future. Examples of successful business rescues include-  Pearl Valley Golf Estate, Advanced Technologies and Engineering Company (ATE), Meltz Success, Moyo Restaurants, South Gold Exploration, Ellerines, South African Calcium Carbide, Edcon, Group 5, Basil Read, Consolidated Group, New House of Busby, SAA, and Comair. These rescue processes  have all contributed to a renewed vigour in the business rescue space and in renewed confidence in the possibility of successful outcomes. Many of these companies have exited from the business rescue process with new owners and where the company has been given the opportunity to continue trading.

It appears that generally, South Africans have accepted that business rescue is a viable alternative to liquidation and one which supports job preservation and the ability to bring distressed companies back from the brink of liquidation, and to a position where such companies can continue to contribute to the South African economy.

Written by Dr Eric Levenstein, Head of Business Rescue & Insolvency Practice at Werksmans Attorneys