Leasing as an Alternative Form of Financing within Family Businesses: The Important Advisory Role of the Accountant
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
2.1. Financing Decisions in Family Businesses
2.2. Alternative Forms of Financing for Family Firms: The Role of Leasing
2.3. The Importance of the External Accountant in (Financial) Decision-Making
3. Methodology
3.1. Data Collection
3.2. Data Analyses
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Relational Aspects
“When we are faced with a problem of how to finance, we do advise on the best form of financing to follow. But sometimes we get the question ‘should we lease?’, ‘should we invest?’“. (A3)
“The entrepreneur says: Look, a certain amount of funding is needed for a certain purchase or we temporarily need extra money in the company”. (A5)
“It depends a bit on the relationship with the customer, but let’s say that with the majority of customers, the decision about financing the business lies with us”. (A2)
4.2. Family Goals and Attributes
4.2.1. Maintaining Control
“In family firms, I don’t think you often get financing proposals where outsiders would get control or participation rights in the firm”. (A4)
“We see more and more that the control, also in family businesses, is less and less important. Certainly, with the Covid-19 situation we currently operate in, it would sometimes be useful if other partners could say ‘I’ll buy you out and continue the business’. Because continuing to pass it on to the next generation is certainly not always evident”. (A5)
“Yes, that is being looked at, but it is not about financing. The reason for attracting an external financier would then rather be about how much power you give to such a person. Then it would be less about the financing itself”. (A3)
“The formalities are about the same, I think. If you have to give a personal guarantee to the bank, it is of course different from when you don’t have to. A separate document has to be drawn up for this and then the formality is of course greater”. (A2)
“Banks are more inclined to request interim figures than a leasing company. Leasing companies limit themselves to requesting figures once or not at all. They base themselves on what has been officially filed by the national bank. The guarantee structure is different. They remain the owner of the asset and can simply take it back. Whether this really plays a role in the assessment of the decision, no I don’t have that experience”. (A1)
4.2.2. Risk Aversion
“I know entrepreneurs who are not concerned with the risk factor; they say I need an investment and I just do it. I also have a case of a family business that is very consciously working on identifying every risk factor”. (A4)
“Low risk: that may be true because with leasing, the company’s guarantee is limited to the asset, but if you don’t pay off your financing with the bank, they can seize everything. So, in that respect the risk is higher with classic financing options”. (A1)
4.3. Technical Contingencies
4.3.1. Type of Asset and Size of the Investment
“Oftentimes, we get this question from a client: I have two proposals here, one from the car dealer and one from the bank. Then they are put next to each other”. (A2)
“This depends on the type of asset in question. If financial resources are needed, you will see generally that they mainly opt for bank financing, rather than attracting external financiers. This is a typical feature for family businesses”. (A3)
“It depends on the type of asset as well as the amount to be financed. A typical example: cars. In this case, everyone automatically looks in the direction of leasing, but when it comes to buildings or real estate, people look more to classical financing options”. (A1)
“Leasing or renting will be encountered mainly in car fleets and very occasionally in real estate”. (A3)
4.3.2. Funding Mix
“Certainly, when it comes to larger amounts, a combination of funding options is increasingly being looked at.” (A4)
“A bank comes up with a proposal and it is seen as “a sacred thing” and then of course I come and say we are going to do it this way for this reason, or I think it is better to use a bit of the entrepreneur’s own contribution or possibly a combination with financing, a combination with leasing. So, I suggest to look at different forms of financing”. (A5)
“In recent years, we have seen more and more the mixed financing phenomena, with, for example, PMV intervening or a European financing fund providing guarantees. The other things that are also coming back more and more are the ‘FFF’: family, friends, fools and win-win loans”. (A4)
4.3.3. Required Guarantees
“Definitely look at the guarantee. If, for example, you or the bank cannot give a guarantee, you can only lease. Then it’s: take it or leave it”. (A2)
4.3.4. Monthly Repayments and Interest Rates
“Let me give you an example: if proposal A is 1 percent and proposal B is 1.02 percent, then there must actually be a good argument for choosing the 1.02 percent proposal. They often say ‘look, you only have to pay so much per month’ and then they often make no distinction between what the total repayment is and what the interest is. This often creates a deceptive image. Of course, they always look at the repayment”. (A5)
“Cash is highly important and if you have the ambition as a company to grow, then you should not burn up your cash flow to a large extent on repayments”. (A4)
4.3.5. Tax Drivers
“VAT of course, you don’t have to pre-finance it because it happens monthly”. (A5)
“It is less of a fiscal issue now, but it certainly was in the past. Companies had the possibility with leasing to create a depreciable base more quickly through increased initial invoices: that possibility is still there, but it is being closed down”. (A1)
4.3.6. Required Flexibility
“With leasing, you do have the opportunity to spread out more: you can say I’m leasing for three years and if you notice that the cash flow doesn’t allow this, you can extend it to four years”. (A1)
“Avoiding a large cash outflow is the main reason for choosing leasing”. (A1)
“We do not apply much operating leasing options, because the family businesses would like to have that value of the asset at the end of the journey”. (A1)
“I usually try to work with off-balance leases for family businesses as much as possible. Why? It’s better in terms of balance sheet presentation and at the end you have that low value purchase option”. (A1)
5. Conclusions
5.1. Practical and Theoretical Implications
5.2. Limitations and Recommendations for Further Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Accountant | Age | Education | Experience as External Accountant | Size of the Office |
---|---|---|---|---|
A1 | 40 | Bachelor Accounting-Tax and Master Commercial Sciences | 15 years | 4 partners and 40 employees |
A2 | 63 | Bachelor Accounting-Tax and Master Fiscal Law | 34 years | 2 partners and 12 employees |
A3 | 28 | Bachelor Accounting and Tax | 6 years | 1 partner |
A4 | 39 | Bachelor and Master in Applied Economic Sciences | 7 years | 1 partner |
A5 | 40 | Bachelor Accounting and Tax | 8 years | 1 partner and 3 employees |
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Michiels, A.; Schepers, J.; Vandekerkhof, P.; Cirillo, A. Leasing as an Alternative Form of Financing within Family Businesses: The Important Advisory Role of the Accountant. Sustainability 2021, 13, 6978. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13126978
Michiels A, Schepers J, Vandekerkhof P, Cirillo A. Leasing as an Alternative Form of Financing within Family Businesses: The Important Advisory Role of the Accountant. Sustainability. 2021; 13(12):6978. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13126978
Chicago/Turabian StyleMichiels, Anneleen, Jelle Schepers, Pieter Vandekerkhof, and Alessandro Cirillo. 2021. "Leasing as an Alternative Form of Financing within Family Businesses: The Important Advisory Role of the Accountant" Sustainability 13, no. 12: 6978. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13126978
APA StyleMichiels, A., Schepers, J., Vandekerkhof, P., & Cirillo, A. (2021). Leasing as an Alternative Form of Financing within Family Businesses: The Important Advisory Role of the Accountant. Sustainability, 13(12), 6978. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13126978