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Business Succession Planning |
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A key component in any business is the agreement
between all owners of the business and their entities. A business succession
plan is an agreement between all the principals of a business, so that if one
of the principals dies, becomes totally or permanently incapacitated or
critically ill, then the outgoing principal will sell, and the continuing
principals or their associates will buy the outgoing interest.
Of course a prime focus of this process is to ensure
that in the event that there is a loss of a key person, there is a funding
process in the form of insurance or assets to satisfy the appropriate value
placed on those shares (which pass to the surviving members of the business).
The payment is placed in the hands of his family in the most cost and tax
effective manner, minimising such areas as capital gains and other time
consuming processes.
Also to be considered are other strategies and
agreements to be put in place to address a sale of the business, the closure of
the business, or the breakdown and rights of purchase of existing
shareholders/unitholders in a buy out situation.
To enable appropriate assessment of the requirements
and to ensure accurate advice, Rosendorff Lawyers will require sight of:
- A full breakdown of your existing structures
with diagrams identifying ownership and the process of distribution if trusts
are concerned.
- A copy of all trust deeds and constitutions
for incorporations.
- A copy of any property, shares or insurance
policies relevant to the funding of this agreement.
A well constructed business succession plan also
addresses issues such as:
- Valuing the business.
- Determining the principals' exposure to the
business in the form of debt and personal guarantees.
- Anticipating the capital gains tax
assessment.
- Deciding when the business succession will
operate, and addressing contingencies.
- Determining the time of disposal which will
crystallise the parties' capital gains tax liabilities.
- Taxation treatment of the proceeds.
- Integrating the business succession plan into
the principals' overall business and personal estate planning (Will).
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