Sherie Griffiths

August 3, 2009

The Companies Act 2006 – The Final Implementation

More from Branston Adams Chartered & Certified Accountants’ July newsletter.

 

The Companies Act 2006 received Royal Assent on 8 November 2006, and has been introduced in a series of different stages. Some of the key changes coming into force on 1 October 2009 are outlined below.

 

New company formation 

The documentation required for forming a company will be very different, with a much shorter Memorandum of Association. Companies will no longer be required to specify their objects, and the concept of authorised share capital will be abolished. New Model Articles will be introduced. There will be three types: 

 

Private company limited by shares

Private company limited by guarantee

Public limited company

 

The Statement of Capital is a new requirement, providing a ’snapshot’ of a limited company’s issued share capital at a given time. It will also need to be provided in various other circumstances, including as part of the application to incorporate and with each annual return made up on or after 1 October 2009.

 

Existing companies 

Companies formed before 1 October 2009 will have constitutions designed under previous law, so there will be a need for transitional provisions. Where the Articles contain matters which are not required under the specific provisions of the Companies Act 2006, the company may consider them to be unduly restrictive. Companies would be well advised to examine their Memorandum and Articles of Association with a view to adopting the new Model Articles, or to changing some of their current provisions.

 

Directors’ Service Addresses 

Directors (and company secretaries where applicable) of both existing and new companies will have the right to set out a service address rather than their usual residential address. The service address may be the company’s registered office.

 

Individual companies will have to maintain two registers of directors – one containing, amongst other things, a service address for each director, and a further register containing the residential address of each director (protected information).

 

Only shareholders of traded public companies will be required to provide any address to Companies House.

 

Registrar’s Powers 

The Registrar of companies will be given a range of new powers. These include powers to decide on the form and manner in which companies must deliver documents, what is needed for a document to be properly delivered, provision of electronic delivery for certain documents, and amendments to the register.

 

Striking off 

The existing procedures will be carried over in a similar form. However, there will be a new simplified administrative restoration procedure for companies struck off by Registrar’s action. Whatever the route of dissolution, the time limit for application to restore will be six years (currently two years for liquidation, 20 years for striking off).

April 27, 2009

Was The Budget What You Were Expecting? – Business Tax & Investment Incentives: Part 2

Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS)

The restrictions on the carry-back of income tax relief to the previous tax year will be removed.  This will apply to 2009/10 and subsequent years.  With effect from 22 April 2009, further changes will be introduced to simplify and improve the EIS rules.

Loan relationships

Where trade debts between connected companies are released after 22 April 2009, the debtor companies will no longer be taxed on the debts released.  For accounting periods beginning on or after 1 April 2009, deductions for interest payable to certain connected foreign companies will now be available on a paid basis rather than on the accruals basis.

Foreign profits

Legislation is to be introduced to ensure that dividends and other distributions received from foreign companies on or after 1 July 2009 will largely be exempt from corporation tax. UK distributions will be exempt to the same extent.  Finance expense payable by UK members of a group of companies will be subject to a cap equal to the consolidated gross finance expense of the group.  This will apply to amounts payable in accounting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2010.  With effect from 1 July 2009 there will be changes to the controlled foreign companies rules and the Treasury Consent rules will be replaced.

Corporate transparency

For accounting periods beginning on or after Royal Assent, the senior accounting officers of large companies and large groups of companies will have reporting obligations aimed at ensuring that the accounting systems are adequate for the purposes of accurate tax reporting.  These obligations will be supported by penalties chargeable on the senior accounting officer personally and on the company.

Anti-avoidance

A number of measures will be introduced to tackle anti-avoidance.  These will affect:

  • Intra-group convertible finance
  • Derecognition of income from derivative contracts
  • Plant and machinery leasing
  • Foreign exchange matching
  • ‘Disguised interest’
  • Exploitation of qualifying loan interest relief
  • Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) regime
  • Double tax relief where foreign tax is repaid
  • Receipts derived from a right to receive income.

With the publishing of the 2008 Finance Act, the UK overtook India as the country with the longest tax code world.

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