As frequent readers of my blog will know, I have much to say on the insolvency regimes and have blogged many times on the issues facing landlords arising out of administrations and other insolvency regimes as well as the impact of recent case law. It is good to see the BPF seeking to tackle the issues head on and I cannot argue with the first points the BPF makes that the government has failed to act on tightening up pre-packs and making it easier to complain against Insolvency Practitioners.
However, whilst the BPF is to be praised for raising potential abuse of the insolvency regimes for the benefit of shareholders at the cost of creditors (and particularly landlord creditors) I think that in highlighting certain areas which are, perhaps, most headline grabbing some important areas for review have not received similar attention. Some of the publicity around this campaign suggests that landlords are the unwitting, weak and undefended party in a war which is being waged against them by a united force of IPs and private investors. Quite simply, in my experience, this is not the case. Now it may be that my experience (which I admit is largely at the 'better' end of the retail property market (by better I mean primary and secondary) and involves dealing with the likes of KPMG, PWC, E&Y, BDO, Grant Thornton and others) largely misses out the activities at the tertiary end of the market and perhaps practices at that end are a little more shady. However, my suspicion is that some landlord practices at that end of the market are not quite 'code compliant'. Further by failing to identify the real reasons why the current regime unfairly prejudices landlords over and above other creditors risks losing the war.
The bad arguments
1. It is largely pre-pack administrations where landlords are leant on to agree concessions
This is not the case. A pre-pack is when a deal is agreed and documented (but not signed) before the appointment of administrators. Some of the administrations where landlords have been pressured to give rent concessions have been pre-packs. However, most high profile administrations have not been pre-packs yet rent concessions have been sought by the new buyer. Therefore, the BPF is, in fact and rightly, targeting administrations and not just pre-packs with this campaign.
2. Administrations are effectively being used to transfer funds from pensioners who have invested in property funds and property companies to private investors buying businesses from administrators and then seeking rent concessions or threatening to close down
Using pensioners in any argument seems to be 'de rigueur' at present. I think care needs to be exercised in utilising this argument. Apart from anything else when it comes to unprofitable sites there are arguments that the landlord community carries some of the blame:
- in good times landlords happily agree high rents fully in the knowledge that if trading conditions deteriorate that rent may break the business
- the UK leasing model with relatively long lease lengths, upwards only reviews and full repairing and insuring provisions, whilst providing secure income in the sense of no costs, means that rising service charges add to the burden on tenants increasing the risk of insolvency
- the use of quarterly rents creates cash flow issues for tenants and also creates greater risk for landlords in the light of recent case law
- whilst some landlords have been sympathetic to struggling tenants many others have taken an aggressive route refusing to consider any concessions accusing the tenants of trying to make them pay for a bad business
No one is being forced to do anything. Landlords may not like the threatening manner in which some agents and/or buyers act; saying that unless the rent is reduced a unit will be closed down. But, at the end of the day, the landlord can call their bluff and refuse to agree the concession. Landlords are not above being threatening either. I had one case where a landlord (not institutional) unlawfully re-entered a property through the use of, what can only be described as, thugs because he did not like the possibility of a CVA. That is far more serious than aggressive posturing in a negotiation.
Landlords are big boys and just as able to use an aggressive negotiating stance. As advised in a recent blog landlords have quite a good negotiating position albeit limited by the commercial realities affecting each individual property. In reality landlords are often paying for the fact that they own a property which is not in a prime location and which can no longer command rents at the level originally agreed. If they could get a better rent then they should refuse the rent concession and get possession. That is called risk and, without wishing to teach grandmothers how to suck eggs, that risk should have been reflected in the yield when the property was acquired.
The other side of the coin
The BPF is absolutely right to put the issue of administrations on the public agenda. I think it is important to recognise that there are issues with the system which impact (possibly unfairly) on landlords which should be at the forefront of the campaign:
- the current legal position on payment of rents (especially in the light of the decision in the recent case of the Leisure (Norwich) II Ltd & Others -v- Luminar Lava Ignite Ltd (in administration) & others [2012] EWHC 951 (Ch) gives freedom to tenants not to pay rent and for administrators to trade rent free until the next quarter day. The Game administration is the biggest example of this. This flies in the face of the "pay for what you use" approach to insolvency situations and is unique to leases due to a clash between real estate law and insolvency law.
- the moratorium preventing forfeiture without consent - with all other contracts the provider can effectively terminate the contract on insolvency and there is nothing to stop them from doing it. However termination of the lease can only occur by use of forfeiture which is a form of proceedings. Due to the moratorium such action requires court approval (or administrator consent). This exposes the landlord to greater potential future loss than other creditors who, whilst they might lose out on arrears, are not exposed to further losses unless they choose to contract with the administrators or the new business
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ReplyDeleteA very interesting article Barry. I shall gladly recommend your blog to others.
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