See also: Netting and Set-off (law)
Secured lending
Main articles: UK banking law, Banking law, and Security interest
The
Bank of England (est 1694) is the lender to all other banks, at an
interest rate set by the Monetary Policy Committee under the Bank of
England Act 1998. When lending on money to businesses at a higher
interest rate, banks will contract for fixed and floating charges to
decrease their risk and stabilise profits.
While UK insolvency law
fixes a priority regime, and within each class of creditor distribution
of assets is proportional or pari passu, creditors can "jump up" the
priority ladder through contracts. A contract for a security interest,
which is traditionally conceptualised as creating a proprietary right
that is enforceable against third parties, will generally allow the
secured creditor to take assets away, free from competing claims of
other creditors if the company cannot service its debts. This is the
first and foremost function of a security interest: to elevate the
creditor's place in the insolvency queue. A second function of security
is to allow the creditor to trace the value in an asset through
different people, should the property be wrongfully disposed of. Third,
security assists independent, out-of-court enforcement for debt
repayment (subject to the statutory moratorium on insolvency), and so
provides a lever against which the secured lender can push for control's
over the company's management.[41] However, given the adverse
distributional impact between creditors, the economic effect of secured
lending is frequently characterised as a negative externality.[42] With
an ostensibly private contract between a secured lender and a company,
assets that would be available to other creditors are diminished without
their consent and without them being privy to the bargain.
Nevertheless, security interests are commonly argued to facilitate the
raising of capital and hence economic development, which is argued to
indirectly benefits all creditors.[43] UK law has, so far, struck a
compromise approach of enforcing all "fixed" or "specific" security
interests, but only partially enforcing floating charges that cover a
range of assets that a company trades with. The holders of a floating
charge take subject to preferential creditors and a "ring fenced fund"
for up to a maximum of £600,000 reserved for paying unsecured
creditors.[44] The law requires that details of most kinds of security
interests are filed on the register of charges kept by Companies House.
However this does not include transactions with the same effect of
elevating creditors in the priority queue, such as a retention of title
clause or a Quistclose trust.[45]
Debentures
Main article: Debenture
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