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PRIVACY
Opinion

Wales needs to be wary of becoming fixated with employee-ownership trust businesses

Partner of corporate advisory firm Gambit Frank Holmes said while transitioning to an EOT ownership model makes sense for certain types of companies, there are growing concerns over financial pressures created post deals leading in some cases to them collapsing

Frank Holmes

Most of us in commerce appreciate how the operational demands of running a business can be all-consuming. Owners are caught up in the challenge of the present, often in denial of what needs to happen for their firm - in which they have taken many risks and made huge sacrifices, often over many decades - to transition when the time comes to relinquish control.

This is why a proactive succession road map is essential to mitigate emotional conflict, avoid disruption and minimise uncertainty for customers, suppliers and employees. After all, over the long term all businesses must embrace change or face extinction.

But succession is more than simply a stage in the business cycle. It is core to its ongoing longevity, albeit dependent on the stewardship of subsequent owners.

In order to achieve a controlled disposal, the incumbent owners are faced with preparing the business, maximising enterprise value, aligning the optimum time to exit, whilst establishing the most viable option to transition (for instance by selling to an external buyer, or an in-house acquirer in the guise of management and employees).

The in-house approach can involve several buy-out alternatives, ranging from a simple share transfer to next of kin, a management buy-out (with or without owner involvement and institutional finance), through to a transfer to employees directly or via a trust.

From a wider economic perspective, transitions to external buyers are particularly attractive. Buyers, whether financial or trade, will expect several-fold returns on funds invested in acquisitions. Interest rates are now closer to their long-term historical average (after a long period of near zero rates), reducing the scope for financial buyers to generate returns simply via financial engineering. As a result, sustained returns on acquisitions are better attained by focusing on new operational growth initiatives, which underpins additional investment in job creation and purchasing capital assets.

Our 24-years of research on disclosed ownership exits by companies across Wales demonstrates that these transitioned companies do not leave Wales, indeed over 80% are still in situ and active and this is due to a reliable workforce, supply chain reliance and commitment from Buyers to invest in equipment and systems on site. These companies may no longer be owned by Welsh shareholders, but they remain grounded in Wales and add significant incremental value to the local economy.

Contrast this with an alternative and increasingly “in vogue” option for selecting suitable owners via an Employee Ownership Trust (EOT).