Why Are Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidations So Popular in Town?

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Why Are Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidations So Popular in Town? After two years of the coronavirus pandemic (and there doesn’t seem to be much relief from it as we head into winter), retailers, small businesses, and companies in certain industries, like travel and hospitality, have struggled to keep going. In order to stay in business, many companies have adopted a particular tool in the restructuring toolkit, and it’s proving rather useful. Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidations (CVLs) have become popular as businesses work to come out the other side of the pandemic. So, let’s look at how useful a CVL really is for struggling businesses and the impact it has on their creditors. What is a Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidation? First, let’s just give you a brief overview of a Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidation. It is a way of liquidating an insolvent limited company, i.e. when the company can no longer pay its bills when they are due. The shareholders and directors of the company voluntarily enter into a liquidation process and come to an agreement with their creditors, managed by an appointed insolvency practitioner (IP), to close the company. When entering a CVL, the company has to stop trading, employees are made redundant and the company is removed from the Companies House register. The IP looks to sell any assets the liquidated company holds, such as stock, buildings, equipment, and machinery, to raise funds to pay creditors. Generally, the decision to liquidate the company is taken due to a culmination of insolvency and creditors threatening to take further action, i.e. apply to the court for compulsory liquidation. For any liquidation process, an insolvency practitioner must be appointed and they will handle the entire liquidation process.


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