Capital reduction
A reduction of capital is a capital re-organisation that has the effect of
allowing the return to shareholders of
capital would otherwise not be distributable.
A reduction of capital is used to increase distributable reserves to make
dividend payments possible, or to make a large return of capital more
efficient.
There are a number of possible
mechanisms, including:
- a share buy back,
- the conversion of share
capital and non-distributable reserves into debt capital
- the conversion of non-distributable reserves into
distributable reserves.
One common scenario where a
reduction of capital is useful is a company that has large accumulated losses
but has returned to profitability and wishes to pay dividends. If large losses
have been made in the past, it may take many years before balance sheet retained earnings turns positive
again. However, if a business has genuinely returned to profitability and is
likely to remain solvent, there is no real reason why it should not be able to
pay some of those profits to shareholders.
The solution is to convert
non-distributable reserves into distributable reserves.
Another common scenario is a company
that simply no longer needs as much capital as it did — for example, because it
has arranged a sale and leaseback that
has taken a lot of assets off its balance sheet,
or because it has sold a business.
One easy solution would be the
conversion of non-distributable reserves to distributable, followed by the
payment of a special dividend, This,
however, would mean that many shareholders would be unable to avoid paying
income tax on the special dividend. One alternative (that has been used by
large UK listed companies), is to convert share capital into debt. Existing
shares are cancelled and replaced with new shares (fewer, or with a lower par value) and bonds,
the latter typically redeemable at the option of
the holder. This allows shareholders to take the return of capital
as a capital gain, and time it to their
advantage.
Mechanisms such as this vary with
the shareholder base (i.e. what sort of tax effects the majority of
shareholders want). They will also evolve over time as tax rules change.
Share buy-backs are often not a real
reduction in capital at all. Most companies that buy-back shares tend to buy
small quantities every year, so their economic effect is to return current
profits to shareholders
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