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REVERSE VESTING ORDER: 1 REMARKABLE CREATIVE WAY TO DO FINANCIAL RESTRUCTURING

reverse vesting order

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure during this COVID-19 pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

If you would prefer to listen to the audio version of this Brandon Blog, please scroll to the very bottom of the page and click play on the podcast.

Vesting order and reverse vesting order

In a corporate insolvency case, a court may grant a vesting order, which authorizes the sale of a company’s assets to the buyer once the purchase price is paid. A vesting order vests ownership in the purchaser as a result of this court order. This is proof that the purchaser is entitled to transfer the assets into its name. No matter what insolvency process is used, this is the use of a vesting order.

In the past year or so, a new trend has emerged regarding the sale of the assets of insolvent companies as part of a restructuring under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA). That new trend is the use of a reverse vesting order.

In this Brandon Blog, I explain what a reverse vesting order is and why I believe its use will be a significant feature of Canadian firm restructurings in 2021 and beyond.

Reverse vesting order – A powerful tool for maximizing recovery in complex insolvencies

A reverse vesting order can be very useful in complex insolvencies. A timely recovery can benefit creditors, and the process can maximize recoveries for all parties. Reverse vesting orders are a good solution for an insolvent debtor corporation when:

  • there are a large number of secured creditors, unsecured creditors and assets;
  • all of the assets do not have an immediate buyer;
  • the company is insolvent; and
  • the company must deal with unwanted assets and a group of creditors in a particular way.

It is best used in a large-scale CCAA corporate restructuring but is not limited to that.

reverse vesting order

Reverse vesting order as a third restructuring tool

There have traditionally been two insolvency processes available to licensed insolvency trustees, insolvency lawyers, and company stakeholders. The two are (i) liquidating assets; and (ii) reorganizing companies. In general, assets are liquidated through either receivership or bankruptcy. Incorporated companies can restructure either under the provisions of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (Canada) (BIA) or, for larger and more complex restructurings, under the CCAA. It is obvious that assets must be sold in order to liquidate them.

Sometimes, as part of a corporate restructuring, there are redundant and unwanted assets that can be sold to raise cash. The question is, what if the real value, especially a going-concern value of a company in a commercial insolvency case is not in its tangible assets. Rather, its real value lies in:

  • the ability to operate in a specific industry and such licenses cannot be sold by their very nature and wording – think of the cannabis and nursing home industries as two examples;
  • tax losses and tax attributes that can be monetized if the licensed insolvency trustee is also able to take over the shares; or
  • being listed on the stock exchange and thus as a public company having a greater market value than a private corporation.

As a result, it is extremely difficult to realize any value from such assets.

What is the importance of the reverse vesting order? How a reverse vesting order works will tell you all you need to know about why it is important as a third restructuring tool. Under a reverse vesting order, a newly incorporated residual corporation is added as a party to the CCAA proceedings.

As part of the CCAA restructuring, the operating debtor company transfers undesirable assets and liabilities to the newly incorporated non-operating company. With its assets and liabilities selected by the purchaser, the debtor company holds only the desirable assets and liabilities, which means its common shares can be sold rather than the company’s assets. As a result, valuable permits, contracts, tax losses, and statutory authority are preserved, which can otherwise be lost in a disposition of assets.

Why is reverse vesting order important?

A reverse vesting order is an alternative to the traditional CCAA plans of arrangement, particularly for companies operating in highly regulated environments or when there is no value remaining after the realization of secured debt and the parties intend to continue the running of the debtor company.

A reverse vesting order is an alternative to the traditional CCAA plans of arrangement, particularly for companies operating in highly regulated environments or when there is no value remaining after the realization of secured debt and the parties plan to continue operating the debtor company.

By using a reverse vesting order, existing corporations, which have been streamlined to become solvent through an innovative solution, are transferred to new investors instead of desirable assets being sold through a court-approved sale. The debtor corporation that initially filed for bankruptcy protection under the CCAA can now be removed from the restructuring proceedings. There are certain unwanted assets and unwanted liabilities that are transferred to the newly incorporated residual corporation. There can then be asset sales allowing for some sort of distribution to creditors (either in a plan of arrangement or in bankruptcy) in order to allow some creditor recovery.

A reverse vesting order may prove to be the most efficient approach to facilitate a going concern operation transfer through restructuring proceedings, letting businesses emerge from CCAA proceedings quickly without having filed a plan of arrangement, while preserving key attributes of the corporate entity and its existing corporate structure.

Legal challenges to the use of reverse vesting orders have been unsuccessful. I would like to discuss the case of Nemaska Lithium Inc.reverse vesting order

Reverse vesting order issued by Québec Superior Court after first contested hearing

In December 2019, Nemaska Lithium Inc. and related companies (Nemaska Lithium or the Nemaska entities) commenced CCAA proceedings. A lithium mining project was developed in Quebec by them. A CCAA judge approved an uncontested sale or investment solicitation process (SISP) in January 2020 that led to the acceptance of a bid that was subject to the condition that a reverse vesting order is issued.

A proposed reverse vesting order provides that Nemaska entities will be acquired by the bidder free of the claims of the unsecured creditors, which will be transferred as part of a pre-closing reorganization to a newly incorporated non-operating company.

The reverse vesting order will allow the purchaser to continue to operate the Nemaska entities in a highly regulated environment by maintaining their existing permits, licences, authorizations, essential contracts, and fiscal attributes. In essence, it is a credit bid in which the shares of the Nemaska entities are acquired in exchange for the assumption of the secured debt.

A shareholder (who was also an alleged creditor) filed motions opposing the reverse vesting order issuance on multiple grounds, including:

  • a vesting order cannot be granted for anything other than a sale or disposition of assets through a vesting order for sales of assets;
  • the reverse vesting order is not permissible under the CCAA because it allows the Nemaska entities to exit CCAA protection outside of a plan of arrangement or plan of compromise;
  • this reverse vesting order contemplated a corporate reorganization that is not permitted by securities laws; and
  • in light of the proposed transaction, the directors and officers of Nemaska Lithium Inc. should not be released.

The Honourable Justice Gouin, J.S.C., reviewed and assessed:

  • the SISP process which led to the offer;
  • the lack of alternatives to the offer;
  • the potential harm to Nemaska Lithium‘s stakeholders, including its employees, creditors, suppliers, and the Cree community;
  • stopping the restructuring process to relaunch a SISP in the future following what was already a thorough examination of the market or, alternatively,
  • bankrupting the Nemaska entities.

In light of all these factors, the judge approved the reverse vesting order on October 15, 2020. Limiting the remedies available under the CCAA would unnecessarily hinder the development of innovative solutions for more complex commercial and social issues in Canadian insolvency matters.

The decision and formal recognition of reverse vesting order by the Court of Appeal

Leave to appeal the CCAA judge‘s decision was sought by the parties who objected to the reverse vesting order being made. The Appellate Court carefully considered the judge’s decision-making process and particularly that the Québec Superior Court judge relied extensively on the principles set out by the Supreme Court of Canada in the matter of 9354-9186 Quebec inc. c. Callidus Capital Corp., namely the:

  • development of CCAA proceedings and the role of the CCAA supervising judge;
  • remedial objectives of Canadian insolvency laws to provide timely, efficient, and impartial resolution of a debtor’s insolvency, secure fair and equitable treatment of creditors’ claims against a debtor, protect the public interest, and balance the costs and benefits of restructuring or liquidating the debtor company’s assets;
  • CCAA‘s goal of preventing social and economic losses from liquidating insolvent companies by facilitating their reorganization and survival as a going concern; and
  • CCAA judge‘s broad discretion under s. 11 of the CCAA in an effort to advance the CCAA’s remedial objectives while taking into account three fundamental factors that the debtor company application must prove: (1) the requested order is appropriate in the circumstances, and (2) good faith on the part of the applicant, and (3) the applicant has been acting with due diligence.

It was determined by the Court of Appeal judge that the risk of potential harm to stakeholders outweighed any legal merits of any arguments raised by the opposing parties. Therefore, the Quebec Court of Appeal denied the leave to appeal the decision of the CCAA judge.

Canada’s Supreme Court has denied leave to appeal. Having now established reverse vesting as an option for CCAA restructurings, the law is now set in stone.

The Nemaska case is the first reverse vesting order transaction to withstand judicial scrutiny in Canada and reaffirms the flexibility of CCAA proceedings for distressed M&A transactions of distressed businesses.reverse vesting order

Reverse vesting order and distressed M&A opportunities

I hope that you found this reverse vesting order Brandon Blog interesting. Problems will arise when you or your company are in business distress, cash-starved and cannot repay debts. There are several insolvency processes available to a company or a person with too much debt.

If you are concerned because you or your business are dealing with substantial debt challenges, you need debt help and you assume bankruptcy is your only option, call me.

It is not your fault that you remain in this way. You have actually been only shown the old ways to try to deal with financial issues. These old ways do not work anymore.

The Ira Smith Team utilizes new modern-day ways to get you out of your debt difficulties with debt relief options as alternatives to bankruptcy. We can get you the relief you need and so deserve. Our professional advice will create for you a personalized debt-free plan for you or your company during our no-cost initial consultation.

The tension put upon you is big. We know your discomfort factors. We will check out your entire situation and design a new approach that is as unique as you and your problems; financial and emotional. We will take the weight off of your shoulders and blow away the dark cloud hanging over you. We will design a debt settlement strategy for you. We know that we can help you now.

We understand that people with credit cards maxed out and businesses facing financial issues need a realistic lifeline. There is no “one solution fits all” method with the Ira Smith Team. Not everyone has to file bankruptcy in Canada. The majority of our clients never do as we know the alternatives to bankruptcy. We help many people and companies stay clear of filing an assignment in bankruptcy.

That is why we can establish a new restructuring procedure for paying down debt that will be built just for you. It will be as one-of-a-kind as the economic issues and discomfort you are encountering. If any one of these seems familiar to you and you are serious about getting the solution you need to become debt-free, contact the Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. group today.

Call us now for a no-cost consultation.

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure during this COVID-19 pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

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CREDIT CARDS MAXED OUT: THAT SCARY CRUSHING FEELING WHEN CANADIAN INSOLVENCY AT HIGHEST LEVEL

credit cards maxed out

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure during this COVID-19 pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

How do credit cards maxed out affect your credit score?

Your credit score is one of the most important things you have to offer anyone who is seeking to lend you money, whether it’s from a bank, a different credit card issuer, or even a landlord. Your credit score is a sort of credit health report that measures how much you owe, how much you owe on different kinds of credit, and how likely you are to default on payments.

Credit cards can be a convenient and effective way to manage your finances. However, the best use of a credit card may not be the best use when it comes to your credit score. Lenders consider one or more credit cards maxed out as a reason for your credit score to decline.

Right now we have a very unique situation when it comes to consumer debt. The average Canadian’s monthly credit card balance is lower today than it was 2 years ago. People’s credit card balance for months has declined. So it is not the case right now that credit cards maxed out. Yet, a recent poll shows that Canadians’ stress levels about their potential insolvency are the highest ever.

In this Brandon Blog, I look at the issues and provide some tips as to what positive things you can do if you are concerned about insolvency. Let’s look at the issues.

Changing habits as pandemic adds to debt load

There has actually been a surge in total Canadian consumer debt. It came mainly from financial debt growth in home mortgage debt and also automobile loans. Home mortgage balance increases originated from both refinancings of existing home loan debt and brand-new mortgage applications.

The thinking with vehicle financings is that it arose from Canadians acquiring vehicles that they had actually intended to purchase earlier. Concerning home loans, the refinancings were to consolidate higher interest rate non-mortgage debt, for credit products such as credit cards, into a brand-new higher home mortgage amount, at greatly reduced rates of interest.

Throughout the last 18 months approximately of the COVID-19 pandemic, Canadians have actually partially paid for or totally repaid their high-interest-rate consumer debt by turning it into low-rate debt from bigger home mortgages along with residence equity credit lines. They have used their real estate to obtain a debt consolidation loan.

Now that the Canadians have in fact done that, the Ipsos survey discovered that 50% of Canadians are now more worried about not having the capability to repay their financial obligations than they used to. Yet one-third of respondents say they will spend more as the economy resumes.

As the economy slowly resumes, many Canadians are looking at a great amount of debt incurred during the pandemic and are stressed over making ends meet without taking on even more financial obligations. They have maxed out the possibility of getting even more cash from their homes.

The reasons are that either there is no more asset value to borrow from and/or their income cannot sustain any more financial obligations. So where is one of the most likely areas this brand-new financial debt is most likely to come from? Paid down credit cards are going to increase once more and many will sooner rather than later have credit cards maxed out from additional credit card debt.

credit cards maxed out
credit cards maxed out

Canada on verge of widespread insolvency and restructuring surge in COVID-19 new normal

Statistics Canada recently reported that overall household debt increased by 0.8% for the 2nd straight month to over $2.5 trillion. Mortgage debt and also home equity credit lines made up $1.98 trillion of that total amount. Over the initial 5 months of 2021, households had $57.5 billion in home mortgage financial obligations, compared to $34.3 billion over the exact same time period in 2020.

At the same time, non-mortgage debt climbed by 0.4% in May to $786.2 billion. Growth in credit card debt as well as other personal loans was the main driver. While charge card debt rose for the third month straight, it was still down by 3.3% from May 2020.

These statistics seem to bear out my thoughts that Canadian consumers now have no more room to borrow against their homes, so now, they will need to turn back to their credit cards and increase their credit card debt in order to fund their expenses. This will not turn out well in the long run. I foresee people having maxed out the amount they can borrow against their homes and then once again having their credit cards maxed out.

Lots of people do not understand how financial problems are created pushing individuals to seek out a remedy such as bankruptcy or a consumer proposal to restructure. The majority think that people get into financial trouble because they can’t properly handle their money. However, in most cases, it is because of an unforeseen trigger. Divorce, job loss, illness and the present pandemic are examples of triggers.

People in financial trouble feel shame and unfortunately, stop them from connecting with us early. Reaching out to a licensed insolvency trustee early is so important.

Credit cards maxed out Is a bad idea

By maxing out your credit cards you’re boosting your credit utilization ratio. This accounts for 30% of your credit score. As such, a maxed-out credit card can adversely impact your credit rating.

Theoretically, yes, you can pay off your credit card by just making the minimum payment. However, it can take you years to pay it off if you are only making the minimum payment. Your interest charges will be higher than your minimum monthly payments.

Your credit utilization ratio and therefore your credit score will suffer. Many people try to solve this problem by just applying to the credit card issuer for an increased credit limit. This may work once, but it does not make any sense. You cannot eliminate debt by increasing it!

Furthermore, you’ll be carrying that debt and paying for it at a very high rate of interest. On the other hand, if you make your repayment by the due date, or make big routine payments to pay it off, you will certainly pay no or extremely little in interest.

credit cards maxed out
credit cards maxed out

Are your credit cards maxed out? Here’s some personalized tips for paying off credit card debt

What can you do trying to be credit card debt-free? My 4 step strategy can help you get there.

1. Credit cards maxed out: Take control

It isn’t simple or comfortable to take a hard look at your finances, but it is essential. Analyze your household expenses, as well as the interest rates linked to every resulting financial obligation. Track your monthly expenses to really understand what your credit card purchases get you on a monthly basis.

This is the first step in understanding your expenditures and cutting down on the ones that are not needed. To recognize where you are going, you need to recognize where you have in fact been.

2. Credit cards maxed out: Minimize interest rates

The normal rate of interest on a bank card is about 19 percent. That’s rather high, so you may wish to think of doing a balance transfer by moving your credit card debt to a card with a minimized or zero-interest offer to assist in paying it off a lot faster.

A word of care: you’ll probably require to pay a transfer fee in doing so. Likewise, you will need to repay the debt in full before that promotion price finishes. Otherwise, the remaining balance on your new balance transfer card will again attract a greater rate of interest, possibly the very same or higher than the card you moved the debt from.

Although I do not hold out a lot of hope, you can ask your credit card firms if they will lower your rate of interest.

3. Credit cards maxed out: Credit counselling as well as debt paydown approaches

If you merely cannot make sufficient earnings to fund your debt repayments, consider a non-profit credit counselling service. At no charge to you, they can get you into a Debt Settlement Plan. Bear in mind that as soon as you are in such a strategy, your charge cards will certainly be cut off.

Do not go to any one of the financial debt settlement services that market often on television or social media. All they do is charge you a fee to take down basic information that a certified non-profit credit counselling agency or a licensed insolvency trustee would certainly do for no cost. After that, they run you through their “program” charging you a lot more fees until you can pay no more. After that, they send you to a qualified bankruptcy trustee.

There are 2 regular financial debt settlement strategies– avalanche method and also snowball method. The avalanche technique of getting out of the credit card financial debt is you initially put all your available cash to pay down your highest interest rate debt. As soon as that’s cleaned up, you start settling the following most costly debt. You keep repeating this up until all your consumer debts are gone.

Sometimes, the snowball technique offers a great deal of extra motivation. With this method, you settle the tiniest financial debt initially, to improve your mood. You use that power to resolve what is the next tiniest debt and so on. You are grabbing steam like a snowball rolling downhill.

It does not matter which strategy you utilize. The vital thing is that you start now and stick with it.

4. Credit cards maxed out: Adhere to it.

Remember your single focus should be reducing debt, not new non-essential spending. So do not prepare any kind of sort of travel getaways or big purchases in the meantime. You could backslide or strike some road bumps yet do not let that distract you or depress you.

Now for the challenging part. When possible, save some money to assist with unpredicted expenses that you would typically place on your credit card. This will certainly minimize the amount you would have to borrow by paying with real cash.

It’s an incredibly lengthy as well as agonizing trip to fully pay off your credit cards maxed out. It also can be an extremely lonely one. People don’t get into the bank card debt trap overnight, so you can’t leave it without some effort.

Credit cards maxed out summary

I hope that you found this credit cards maxed out Brandon Blog interesting. I wrote this now because I fear the trend I see from both the Ipsos survey and the Statscan report shows that now that Canadians have done their debt consolidation and credit card balances are low, the credit cards are now being run up again. The end result will be higher debt than the average Canadian started with.

Problems will arise when you are cash-starved and in debt, especially with a maxed-out credit card. There are several insolvency processes available to a person or company with too much debt.

If you are concerned because you or your business are dealing with substantial debt challenges, you need debt help and you assume bankruptcy is your only option, call me.

It is not your fault that you remain in this way. You have actually been only shown the old ways to try to deal with financial issues. These old ways do not work anymore.

The Ira Smith Team utilizes new modern-day ways to get you out of your debt difficulties with debt relief options as alternatives to bankruptcy. We can get you the relief you need and so deserve. Our professional advice will create for you a personalized debt-free plan for you or your company during our no-cost initial consultation.

The tension put upon you is big. We know your discomfort factors. We will check out your entire situation and design a new approach that is as unique as you and your problems; financial and emotional. We will take the weight off of your shoulders and blow away the dark cloud hanging over you. We will design a debt settlement strategy for you. We know that we can help you now.

We understand that people with credit cards maxed out and businesses facing financial issues need a realistic lifeline. There is no “one solution fits all” method with the Ira Smith Team. Not everyone has to file bankruptcy in Canada. The majority of our clients never do as we know the alternatives to bankruptcy. We help many people and companies stay clear of filing an assignment in bankruptcy.

That is why we can establish a new restructuring procedure for paying down debt that will be built just for you. It will be as one-of-a-kind as the economic issues and discomfort you are encountering. If any one of these seems familiar to you and you are serious about getting the solution you need to become debt-free, contact the Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. group today.

Call us now for a no-cost bankruptcy consultation.

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure during this COVID-19 pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

credit cards maxed out
credit cards maxed out
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IS MORTGAGE DEBT NOW THE OBSESSION FOR MANY CANADIANS?

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure during this COVID-19 pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

Is mortgage debt surge responsible for pushing Canadian consumer debt levels higher?

For many people in Canada, a house is the centre of the family’s financial world. As a result, if the family’s financial situation changes, the house, and the mortgage that goes with it, become the focus of the family.

Is mortgage debt pressing consumer financial debt higher in Canada?

Equifax Canada recently reported that it is. One effect of the pandemic is that Canadian credit card usage and debt are dropping, as families borrow more cash right for their homes while spending less on everything else.

In this Brandon Blog, I offer some thoughts on why is mortgage debt rising, pushing total Canadian consumer debt above pre-pandemic levels, while credit card debts are falling during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Is mortgage debt surge pushing Canada consumer debt to $2.1 trillion?

Those in the real estate sector in Canada will certainly agree that the housing market is one of the greatest financial factors that influence the success of the Canadian economy. These days, the sector is exceptionally competitive which has a great influence on the housing market.

Competition among residential real estate buyers is fierce in many markets throughout the nation, especially British Columbia and Ontario. The pandemic has actually stimulated a record boom in Canada’s housing market. Low rates of interest, as well as brand-new demand for a larger home, have actually sustained bidding battles for houses.

What’s behind the record-breaking growth in the hot housing market in Canada? Is mortgage debt behind the increase in mortgage debt? Yes, according to Statistics Canada. It stated last Friday that Canadian families incurred a new high level of mortgage debt in the 2nd quarter in a row. Canadian households added record mortgage debt amid low interest, high prices.

Driving hot markets in many regions aided move real estate prices and the average sale price higher, pushing the need for home loans to $34.9 billion in the 4th quarter of 2020. This need beat the previous high of $28.7 billion in the 3rd quarter, Statistics Canada reported.

is mortgage debt
is mortgage debt

Is mortgage debt growth making Canada’s economy vulnerable? The central bank says yes

What is the Bank of Canada‘s worries? The Bank of Canada said that growing mortgage debt makes Canada’s economy vulnerable.

High household debt, as well as inequalities in the real estate market, have escalated in the past 12 months, leaving the economy more prone to economic shocks. The central bank said that although consumer debt had actually dropped in early 2020, a boost in housing debt has more than balanced out that decrease, with total household debt climbing sharply since mid-2020.

That is one reason why, effective June 1, 2021, the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI, Canada’s leading financial regulatory authority, elevated the home mortgage stress test level for mortgage applications through banks, insurance companies and credit unions. It does not yet apply to private mortgages.

The stress test was raised so that borrowers must now be able to meet the financial test to carry a mortgage at an annual interest rate of either 5.25 percent or 2 points over the actual mortgage market rate they can get, whichever is greater. This will certainly make it harder for some to get approved for a home mortgage. The government hopes this will lead to reducing the pool of accepted borrowers as well as eventually, lowering residence rates.

The June 1 adjustment implies potential mortgagors will certainly need to prove that their finances can stand paying at that greater interest rate, no matter what rate a lender is willing to lend at. OSFI hopes that this adjustment will reduce either the number of buyers or the amount a purchaser can afford to pay given the mortgage financing available to them. The hope is that it will stem the higher pressure on house prices in the country.

Is mortgage debt the only reason Canadian household debt is so high?

As you can see from the above, mortgage debt is up but credit card debt is down. in fact, it is at a 6 year low. So is mortgage debt the only reason total household debt is up? When I speak of mortgage debt, I am talking about conventional mortgage debt. The answer is no.

Equifax Canada also reports that other big-ticket credit products like credit lines have likewise represented a general increase in Canadian financial debt. She said there was a 60 percent rise in house equity credit lines! Like mortgage debt, this is a secured debt registered against the borrower’s home.

People are borrowing these additional home equity lines of credit. The worry is if rates of interest rise, individuals may not be able to pay the debt servicing costs and the debt payments for that financial obligation. Those kinds of loans are usually at a variable interest rate.

is mortgage debt
is mortgage debt

My take on why is mortgage debt and other household debt driving in these directions?

It wasn’t an interest rate boost that forced Canadians to get consumer spending in check – it took a pandemic for many of us to transform our spending practices. Stay-at-home orders, lockdowns, nowhere to go and fewer places to spend our money have all contributed to what we are now seeing. Couple that with many Canadians being able to work from home and Canada’s COVID-19 Economic Response Plan.

Consumer spending shifted away from credit card spending. My personal view is that people’s spending patterns shifted away from consumer goods that normally would be charged to credit cards. Perhaps some of the increase in home equity lines of credit was to consolidate debt by borrowing against their homes to pay down high rate credit card debt.

Also, people were hunkered down working, going to school and generally living 24/7 in their homes. We all got to see the points we love about our home and perhaps noticed for the first time, or at least were bothered for the first time, with little imperfections in our homes. That could lead to increased borrowing in order to do additions or renovations.

It also could lead to selling the existing home and buying a different one and moving. Maybe that drove more demand than there was supply, which caused home prices to continue rising. Increased pricing required increased mortgage application numbers, mortgage borrowing, the individual size of mortgages to increase and drove total mortgage growth. Perhaps FOMO also contributed to the increased demand.

This is merely conjecture on my part, but one thing is for sure. The pandemic could not stop house prices from rising, mortgage debt from increasing and credit card debt from reducing. Overall, household debt increased. The worry now is if interest rates rise, it will take a larger proportion of household income to meet debt servicing requirements. Hopefully, everyone’s household budget will be able to handle it.

Is mortgage debt now the focus for many Canadians?

Apparently so. I hope that you found this Is mortgage debt now the obsession for many Canadians Brandon Blog interesting. If you are concerned because you or your business are dealing with substantial debt challenges and you assume bankruptcy is your only option, call me.

It is not your fault that you remain in this way. You have actually been only shown the old ways to try to deal with financial issues. These old ways do not work anymore.

The Ira Smith Team utilizes new modern-day ways to get you out of your debt difficulties while avoiding bankruptcy. We can get you the relief you need and so deserve. Our professional advice will create for you a personalized debt-free plan for you or your company during our no-cost initial consultation.

The tension put upon you is big. We know your discomfort factors. We will check out your entire situation and design a new approach that is as unique as you and your problems; financial and emotional. We will take the weight off of your shoulders and blow away the dark cloud hanging over you. We will design a debt settlement strategy for you. We know that we can help you now.

We understand that people and businesses facing financial issues need a realistic lifeline. There is no “one solution fits all” method with the Ira Smith Team. Not everyone has to file bankruptcy in Canada. The majority of our clients never do. We help many people and companies stay clear of bankruptcy.

That is why we can establish a new restructuring procedure for paying down debt that will be built just for you. It will be as one-of-a-kind as the economic issues and discomfort you are encountering. If any one of these seems familiar to you and you are serious about getting the solution you need to become debt-free, contact the Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. group today.

Call us now for a no-cost consultation.

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure during this COVID-19 pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

is mortgage debt
is mortgage debt
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Brandon Blog Post

STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS IN ONTARIO: THE UNCERTAINTY BEHIND ONTARIO’S LIMITATION PERIOD IN BANKRUPTCY NOW ABSOLUTELY SETTLED

statute of limitations in ontario
statute of limitations in ontario

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure during this COVID-19 pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

If you would prefer to listen to the audio version, please scroll to the very bottom and click play on the podcast.

Statute of limitations in Ontario: The uncertainty behind Ontario’s limitation period for debt collection

Many individuals have a problem determining the statute of limitations in Ontario for financial debt collection under the Limitations Act, 2002, S.O. 2002, c. 24, Sched. B. This confusion is all-natural because the time duration is computed based upon the moment when a creditor knew, or ought to have actually recognized that it had a claim to get legal advice on and initiate legal action for recovery.

The unpredictability emerges because the point you need to begin determining from is not necessarily a certain date you can indicate on the calendar. Rather, it may need to be presumed from the realities in any specific situation.

Why does the limitation period matter? It matters because if a creditor does not initiate legal action within the allowed period of time in Ontario within 2 years of knowing, or having out to have known, that it had a claim to litigate, the claim is then statute-barred. What this means is that the claim can no longer be pursued as a valid debt.

In this Brandon Blog, I describe what seems to be the final word now on the statute of limitations in Ontario and proving your claim in bankruptcy.

Statute of limitations in Ontario: Time limits, collections and bankruptcy

If you think it was confusing for only the average Ontario citizen, think again. It was also confusing for lawyers and licensed insolvency trustees. In my March 15, 2021, Brandon Blog titled “STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS: IS STATUTE BARRED DEBT A BASIC PROPER BANKRUPTCY CLAIM IN ONTARIO?“, I described the decision of Master Mills (as she then was) who has since been elevated to the position of a Judge.

Her decision released on March 8, 2021, in. the legal proceeding of In re: John Trevor Eyton, 2021 ONSC 1719 (CanLII), has changed the way we look at creditors who file a proof of claim in either a consumer proposal, restructuring proposal or a bankruptcy. Just to refresh your memory, she decided that if a claim was past the two-year limit under the statute of limitations in Ontario, then the creditor could not even file a proof of claim in bankruptcy on that debt.

In that blog, I also described what the statute means for debt collectors. I also said that the Eyton decision was going to be appealed. Well, it was and we now have the ruling from a Judge of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice (In Bankruptcy and Insolvency).

statute of limitations in ontario
statute of limitations in ontario

Statute of limitations in Ontario and bankruptcy

The appeal raises a rarely-considered and narrow issue: is a claim which is statute-barred under the statute of limitations in Ontario able to be included by a creditor in filing a Form 31 proof of claim in the bankruptcy of the debtor?

On May 19, 2021, Justice S.F. Dunphy released his decision regarding the appeal of the Eyton decision. I won’t repeat the original decision here because I discussed it in detail in my above-noted blog.

Suffice to say that the basis of this litigation is that the Trustee disallowed the creditor’s filed proof of claim because the last payment made on the debt was in April 2016. The creditor did not take legal action against the debtor.

This made the claim now more than two years old before the date of bankruptcy. Therefore the Trustee said since the claim is statute-barred, it cannot be a debt to be proved in this bankruptcy.

Statute of limitations inForm 79 Ontario: When it is too late to sue?

As previously mentioned, the creditor appealed the Trustee’s decision to Master Mills and lost. Now the creditor was appealing the Master’s decision to the Judge.

The issue to be decided was when:

  • it is far too late to take legal action to try to collect on the debt;
  • the debtor has actually submitted either for a restructuring proposal or for bankruptcy under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (Canada) (BIA);
  • the debtor has actually included the amount of that creditor’s claim in the sworn Statement of Affairs; and
  • under the statute of limitations in Ontario, the financial debt is statute-barred yet is not extinguished,

can the creditor file a claim for that financial obligation in the insolvency proceeding?

statute of limitations in ontario
statute of limitations in ontario

Statute of limitations in Ontario and the Effect of Form 79 Statement of Affairs

The creditor’s first point in the appeal was that its debt was listed in the debtor’s sworn Statement of Affairs. Since the debtor recognized the debt, and the debt is not extinguished, then a proof of claim for the amount should be admitted by the Trustee.

The Judge did not think much of this argument. He stated that just because an amount is listed as a liability on the Statement of Affairs, each creditor is still required to prove their claim. The distinction is that a debtor may think that the debt is a provable claim, but a creditor still has to prove their claim. Stated another way, every claim is a potential claim until proven in accordance with the BIA.

In most restructuring proposals or bankruptcy administrations, the debtor’s listing of claims for at least the unsecured debt will never exactly match the final list of proven claims. That is just the way it is.

Can statutes of limitation barred claims be proved in bankruptcy?

As the BIA is federal law, then all provincial limitations laws in Canada are in play. Not just the two-year limitation period in the statute of limitations in Ontario. The creditor’s legal counsel advanced the following arguments regarding civil claims in bankruptcy:

  • The BIA does not define provable claims with any reference or qualification relating to any provincial applicable limitation periods.
  • The Supreme Court of Canada in Schreyer v. Schreyer, 2011 SCC 35 (CanLII), [2011] 2 SCR 605 decided that the meaning of the term provable claims in the BIA is that if the debt exists and can be liquidated and if the underlying obligation exists as of the date of bankruptcy and if no provincial exemption rule applies, the claim will be deemed to be provable.
  • The two-year limitation period in the statute of limitations in Ontario is procedural in nature because it does not extinguish the debt, it just says that a proceeding, such as the issuance of a statement of claim, cannot begin.
  • In one of the Ontario cases I mentioned in my earlier blog (Re: Temple), the Judge, in that case, found that a claim that was older than the basic limitation period in Ontario could be used as a debt owing for the purpose of launching a Bankruptcy Application seeking a Bankruptcy Order being made against a debtor.

The Judge was not persuaded by any of these arguments. He shot them down one by one. I can summarize all of his comments as follows. The purpose of the BIA is to have an equitable distribution of the bankrupt’s assets amongst the creditors, in the priority laid out in the BIA. The claims of all unsecured creditors are to be treated equally and each unsecured creditor is to receive their pro-rata share.

If a creditor who cannot enforce its claim in respect of payment can receive the same share as a creditor who still can enforce its claim for payment, then the claims of all unsecured creditors are not being treated equally.

So Judge Dunphy of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice (In Bankruptcy and Insolvency) dismissed the appeal. I have been told by the lawyer for the creditor who appealed the Master’s decision to the Judge that he does not feel he has a chance to win an appeal to the Court of Appeal for Ontario. So the law on claims barred by the statute of limitations in Ontario in an insolvency proceeding is now settled. Such a claim is not a claim provable and probably cannot even be used as the basis of a claim in a Bankruptcy Application.

statute of limitations in ontario
statute of limitations in ontario

What does this mean for proceedings and intended proceedings in Ontario?

As far as what this means for debt collectors trying to collect a claim in respect of any statute barred debt and for a debt collection agency, whether they are trying to collect on personal debts such as a credit card debt or on commercial debts, look at my previous blog where I discuss what it means for a debt collection agency.

As far as what it means for an insolvency process, there are several takeaways for me on this. First, whenever a creditor files a completed Form 31 proof of claim, there needs to be a schedule attached to the form that clearly shows how the debt is calculated. If there is not going to be any distribution to the unsecured creditors then there is no need to vet every claim to the nth degree.

However, where there will be a distribution to the unsecured creditors, then the Trustee is going to have to take great care in reviewing and vetting each claim. The Trustee will have to make a determination in each case if the claim is barred by the statute of limitations in Ontario or not. If there is insufficient detail in the schedule attached to the Form 31 proof of claim, the Trustee will have to go to each such creditor and get more details. I suspect there will be a whole lot more claims being disallowed than in the past.

Of course, each creditor whose claim has been disallowed by the Trustee because it is barred by the statute of limitations in Ontario has the right to appeal the Trustee’s decision to the Master sitting in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Bankruptcy and Insolvency).

Statute of limitations in Ontario: Get a personalized debt free plan today

I hope that you found this statute of limitations in Ontario Brandon Blog interesting. If you are concerned because you or your business are dealing with substantial debt challenges and you assume bankruptcy is your only option, call me. It is not your fault that you remain in this way. You have actually been only shown the old ways to try to deal with financial issues. These old ways do not work anymore.

The Ira Smith Team utilizes new modern-day ways to get you out of your debt difficulties while avoiding bankruptcy. We can get you the relief you need and so deserve. Our professional advice will create for you a personalized debt-free plan for you or your company during our no-cost initial consultation.

The tension put upon you is big. We know your discomfort factors. We will check out your entire situation and design a new approach that is as unique as you and your problems; financial and emotional. We will take the weight off of your shoulders and blow away the dark cloud hanging over you. We will design a debt settlement strategy for you. We know that we can help you now.

We understand that people and businesses facing financial issues need a realistic lifeline. There is no “one solution fits all” method with the Ira Smith Team. Not everyone has to file bankruptcy in Canada. The majority of our clients never do. We help many people and companies stay clear of bankruptcy.

That is why we can establish a new restructuring procedure for paying down debt that will be built just for you. It will be as one-of-a-kind as the economic issues and discomfort you are encountering. If any one of these seems familiar to you and you are serious about getting the solution you need to become debt free, contact the Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. group today.

Call us now for a no-cost consultation.

statute of limitations in ontario
statute of limitations in ontario

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure during this COVID-19 pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

 

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Brandon Blog Post

DEBT COLLECTIONS NEWS: EXPECT MENACING DEBT COLLECTIONS ACTIVITY TO PICK UP AS THE ECONOMY REOPENS

debt collections
debt collections

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure during this coronavirus pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

If you would prefer to listen to the audio version of this debt collections Brandon Blog, please scroll to the very bottom and click play on the podcast.

Expect debt collections activity to pick up as economy reopens: experts

On March 2, 2021, The Canadian Press published an article by Salmaan Farooqui titled Expect debt collections activity to pick up as economy reopens: experts. The crux of the article is that credit specialists state Canadian consumers who owe money must prepare for debt collection agencies to increase their activities as the Canadian economy reopens.

During 2020, lenders and by extension, their collections agencies, had eased up on debt collections from Canadian households and companies. The reason for this drop in demands being made on outstanding debt was the COVID-19 pandemic. Lenders knew that all Canadians were hurting and there were even some loan deferral programs put into place.

But these credit experts are now seeing signs of debt collections picking up. Statistics Canada reported that the Canadian economy started to bounce back in January 2021. No doubt this pickup in the economic activity is making creditors consider if now is a good time to start taking action to try to collect on credit card and other delinquent debt.

As the article indicates, there is a fair bit of pent-up demand now for collection agency services. So if you are one of those expecting calls from debt collection agencies, here are some tips that they do not want you to know.

Debt collections: What is a debt collection agency?

The best answer is found in the question itself: A debt collection agency is an organization that collects debts. Now, ask yourself the follow-up question: What is a debt? It’s money that you owe to another person, company or organization.

In essence, debt collection agencies are hired by businesses and individuals to collect money that is owed to them. The agencies work for the creditors and not for consumers.

In Ontario, collections agencies or debt collectors are people or companies who:

  • obtains or arranges for settlement of debts owing to a person or company;
  • sells forms or letters claiming to be a debt collections system;
  • offers debt settlement services; or
  • buys up from lenders different types of debt that are in arrears and tries to collect on the debts.

Ontario debt collectors need to pass the eligibility requirements to register and operate a collection agency.

Debt collections: What debt collectors do

When a person or company is unable to pay what is owed, they are said to be in debt. When a creditor cannot collect the debt, the creditor may contact a debt collection agency for assistance.

A debt collector contacts the individual or business that owes the money and attempts to collect debts owed to the debt collector’s client. Debt collectors earn a commission of around 25% of the money collected. They are not allowed to harass or threaten people to get money.

In Canada, the law on debt collections and debt collectors is set by the individual provincial governments. In Ontario, the Collection and Debt Settlement Services Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. C.14 sets out all the requirements that collections agencies and each collection agent must abide by.

debt collections
debt collections

How Reputable Collectors Operate

We have all heard horror stories about collectors. Reputable collectors use their reputations to help recover funds. For example, if you are a lawyer specializing in debt collections, you use your reputation to persuade clients that you will recover the funds owed to them. If you are a supplier, you can use your reputation to persuade a debtor to pay. If you can prove your reputation, you have a better chance of collecting the monies owed to you.

Let’s say you’re a collector, and you’ve been retained to collect on a debt. The debtor has previously agreed to repay the debt but has not yet done so. What do you do next? Reputable debt collectors will first send a demand letter that also acts as a debt validation letter.

In the letter, they confirm the debt and give a certain period of time for the debtor to pay. If the debtor does not then contact the collector to try to enter into a debt settlement plan, then the collector starts calling the debtor to collect on the debt. But there’s a chance that these activities will not be enough to get the debtor to pay. In fact, the debtor might even become hostile. In that case, a lawsuit may be their next step.

What to Expect When You Have Debt in Collections

Canadian debt collectors are regulated by the province they operate in. They keep creditors from giving up on their credit delinquencies. In most cases, debt that gets to the debt collections stage is in the hands of a debt collector within a few months of the date the debt went into default. Debt collectors have the power to negotiate settlements for delinquent debt. Their success rate in collecting on debt is better than that of a creditor. The debt collector will make one or more attempts to collect on the debt, usually first by mail and then by phone.

If you have received a letter from a debt collector, or you are being sued for any outstanding debts, you are at a turning point in your financial life. You may have already begun to feel overwhelmed and don’t know where to turn. If you have been sued, the court may have already ordered you to pay. This can feel overwhelming, but there are options for you to consider.

With a debt in default, credit scores suffer. Debt collectors will report any unpaid debt to the credit bureaus, regardless of whether or not the debt is legitimate. It will negatively affect your credit score.

This is because the credit bureaus consider unpaid debt collections to be a negative financial obligation or credit risk. If you have a debt in default, you are probably worried about your credit score.

Debt collections: What Can a Collection Agency Do To Me in Canada?

A collection agency can demand payment for an outstanding debt. When the debt is handed over to a collection agency to try to recover the debt, that places a bad mark on your credit report. With you being in debt collections, you will have to pay some money if you want to settle the debt. The payment will depend on the situation, and there is a lot to consider when making a decision.

For example, you will need to consider how much money you owe and how much the collection agency will require you to pay. When you have outstanding debt, it is important that you make sure you either pay it in full if you can afford to, work out a payment plan to pay the full amount over time or, see if you can settle with the collection agency for a reduced amount you can afford to pay immediately. This will avoid the potential for the collection agency to turn the account over to a lawyer and take legal action against you.

debt collections
debt collections

Debt Collections: Can a Collection Agency Charge Interest in Canada?

The rate of interest that some debt collection agencies charge their customers is quite high. The reason is that the type of debt they are collecting, such as credit card debt, originally charged a high rate of interest on late or defaulted payments, or on the outstanding balance if you only made minimum payments.

A lot of Canadians do not know that a debt collection agency in Canada can charge interest on the outstanding financial obligation. A collection agency may be able to charge interest on the debts they are collecting. Nevertheless, this can be no greater than what was originally described in the agreement between the lender and customer.

So, while they can bill you interest just like a lender can, they cannot control how much the interest is and cannot tack on any extra charges, such as for their collection service.

Debt Collections: What Should You Do If You Are Being Pestered By a Collection Agency?

So, what should you do if they won’t leave you alone? Well, the most effective answer is to, certainly, answer them and agree to pay your financial obligations. This can be done by paying completely, setting up a payment plan, or reaching an agreement to pay a lesser amount immediately.

Each option will have its pros and cons, and its success relies upon your financial scenario as well as preferences. Typically speaking, it is best to pay the financial debt completely. However, I recognize that can be challenging, specifically if the amount of debt you owe is quite considerable. Any way that you are able to get this debt off of your credit report as well as off of your back is a good thing. Any one of the techniques I mentioned is much better than just allowing the financial debt to age and worsen.

The debt collection agencies will be calling

Information from Equifax Canada reveals that just 24 percent of debt-ridden Canadians who accessed deferral programs beginning in 2020 were able to utilize the breathing space to improve their credit situation.

So what we discussed so far is:

  • The Canadian economy seems to be starting its recovery and should show economic growth in 2021. For sure there are still people feeling pain in different sectors of the economy and we are not finished with the shutdown conditions in Toronto and elsewhere in Ontario.
  • How the debt collections business works in Ontario.
  • There are many Canadians who are debt-ridden.
  • If everyone in Canada pulled their credit report only 24% of the reports would show an improvement since the COVID-19 pandemic began.
  • The news according to the experts is that there will be growth in the debt collections industry. These businesses are going to return to make their phone calls to consumers trying to collect on old unpaid debts. They may even start legal action against some borrowers.

So what is next as the economy and consumer confidence pick up is that debt collections activities will pick up again too. What can the remaining 76% of Canadians who could not improve their situation since the COVID-19 virus hit do when the bill collectors call? There are various options for them, and the 24% that wish to still make improvements to their credit reports and credit scores. Here are some suggestions.

debt collections
debt collections

6 fantastic reasons to create and follow a household budget to track your household spending

As you know, I have written many blogs on the benefits of preparing, monitoring and following a budget for your household spending. The advantages of doing so include:

Here are 6 fantastic reasons you should have a household budget plan:

  1. A spending plan offers you control over your cash: A budget plan is a list of all sources of your monthly income and all your expenses that you need to make those monthly payments on. It enables you to plan how you will use your cash. As opposed to money just flying out of your wallet, you make willful decisions on where you desire your cash to go. You’ll never have to wonder at the end of the month where your cash went.
  2. A family budget keeps you concentrated on your financial objectives: Budgeting will permit you to fulfill your economic objectives – paying down debt should be the primary objective so that you don’t get nasty calls from the debt collectors. Then you can allocate savings for other purposes such as an emergency fund, a vacation, money for a retirement savings plan and purchasing a home. With a budget, you’ll recognize specifically what you can afford and you can choose where your cash is spent. For example, if your immediate objective is to save for that down payment on a condo or house, then you might need to abandon that vacation you intended to take. Your budget plan will inform you precisely what you can or can’t afford.
  3. A household budget will make certain that you don’t spend what you don’t have: Credit cards provide such ease of use but that is also what makes them really easy to up your spending since it does not feel like there is any real money traded in the deal. Canadians can rack up serious charge card bills and land up deep in the red before they realize what’s happened. When you create and adhere to your budget plan you have to count every little amount you spend, even if it’s a credit card purchase. You will not wake up deep in the red, wondering just how you arrived at that place.
  4. A spending plan will prepare you for the unanticipated: Every budget plan should have a rainy day fund for those unforeseen expenses. It’s suggested that you must budget for 3 months worth of costs for when there may be an unexpected layoff or various other unplanned major expenditures. Do not be alarmed; you don’t have to create that 3-month cash fund immediately. Grow your fund up gradually. If you haven’t started one yet, then even a small amount each month set aside is an improvement.
  5. A family budget minimizes stress: Many Canadians panic on a monthly basis about where the money will come from to pay their expenses. A budget will offer you peace of mind. It shows you just how much you earn and also what your expenses are. If need be you can decrease unneeded expenses or try to get added work to live within a balanced budget plan. Say goodbye to panic at the end of the month.
  6. A budget plan can help you get the retired life you’ve been dreaming of: Saving for your retirement is very crucial and your spending plan can help you save for your future. Set aside part of your revenue on a monthly basis for retirement savings. Begin early and also constantly stay with it. The money you save now will certainly determine the kind of retired life you can anticipate.

When budgeting alone is not enough and you need some debt settlement

In many previous Brandon Blogs, I have described the important role of the community-based non-profit credit counselling organization. I am not talking about for-profit debt counselling services that have inviting advertising and jingles. Those kinds of organizations you must stay away from. In fact, one is defending a class-action lawsuit in British Columbia. If the class-action lawsuit is successful, it and companies just like it will be put out of business.

These companies suck fees out of the debtor until they cannot pay anymore. Then they walk you down to their favourite licensed insolvency trustee to file a consumer proposal. Consumer proposals are the only federal government-approved debt settlement plan. Only a licensed insolvency trustee can administer consumer proposals.

You could have saved the fees that you really couldn’t afford to pay in the first place, just by going for a no-cost consultation first with the licensed insolvency trustee.

What I am talking about is the true non-profit debt counselling agency. They do not charge you fees. They can review your budget to make sure that it is realistic and give you additional help. They can also try to strike a deal with your creditors for you to either pay the full balance out over time without additional interest or penalties or, a reduced payout now.

Can you raise money on a payment plan that you can afford the monthly payments?

Should you consolidate your unsecured debts? Consolidation is the combining of unsecured debts into one low monthly payment with one creditor. These loans typically carry a lower interest rate than the original credit cards or other unsecured debts. You have to make sure that the terms of the consolidation loan are as good as or better than their current credit card terms.

When it comes to getting a consolidation loan, there are a few things you should know. First, a consolidation loan is a loan that you take out to pay off multiple other loans. Second, you may already have a consolidation loan if you have a home equity loan or a home equity line of credit. If you have an unsecured loan, you can consolidate it into a secured loan, where the creditor can take your home if you don’t pay back the loan.

Turning an unsecured loan into a secured loan is not something you should do if you are already contemplating filing a consumer proposal or an assignment in bankruptcy. However, working with your financial advisor, accountant or non-profit credit counselling services agency, you may find that the risk is worth it. That would be because your budget shows that you can afford the lower monthly payment repayment plan if you get the debt consolidation loan. It is also good if it actually helps you avoid an insolvency filing.

debt collections
debt collections

Aggressive debt collections techniques may force some into an insolvency filing

This would be the last step if any of the above options do not work for some of the 76% of Canadians with high debt levels who have not been able to improve their debt situation since the onset of COVID-19 cases. The purpose of this Brandon Blog is not to go into detail on the consumer proposal or bankruptcy processes. I have written many detailed blogs before on each of these insolvency processes. You can find them by using the search function at the top of this blog.

These two would be a great place for you to start:

Debt collections summary

Everyone is hoping that the negative effects of the coronavirus pandemic will soon be in our rearview mirror and Canada will experience continued growth. The article referred to at the beginning of this blog says that the experts feel that soon credit collectors will be increasingly active. You will start receiving those harassing phone calls again. They will be taking action from debt against you, which could even include legal action against you.

If you are concerned because you or your business are dealing with substantial debt challenges and you assume bankruptcy is your only option, call me. It is not your fault that you remain in this way. You have actually been only shown the old ways to try to deal with financial issues. These old ways do not work anymore.

The Ira Smith Team utilizes new modern-day ways to get you out of your debt difficulties while avoiding bankruptcy. We can get you the relief you need and so deserve.

The tension put upon you is big. We know your discomfort factors. We will check out your entire situation and design a new approach that is as unique as you and your problems; financial and emotional. We will take the weight off of your shoulders and blow away the dark cloud hanging over you. We will design a debt settlement strategy for you. We know that we can help you now.

We understand that people and businesses facing financial issues need a realistic lifeline. There is no “one solution fits all” method with theIra Smith Team. Not everyone has to file bankruptcy in Canada. The majority of our clients never do. We help many people and companies stay clear of bankruptcy.

That is why we can establish a new restructuring procedure for paying down debt that will be built just for you. It will be as one-of-a-kind as the economic issues and discomfort you are encountering. If any one of these seems familiar to you and you are serious about getting the solution you need, contact the Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. group today.

Call us now for a no-cost consultation.

We will get you or your business back up driving to healthy and balanced trouble-free operations and get rid of the discomfort factors in your life, Starting Over, Starting Now.

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure during this coronavirus pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

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Brandon Blog Post

LAURENTIAN UNIVERSITY FACING INSOLVENCY MAKES STARTLING CCAA NEWS FILING FOR CREDITOR PROTECTION

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy, and secure during this coronavirus pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

If you would prefer to listen to the audio version of this Brandon Blog, please scroll to the bottom and click play on the podcast.

laurentian university

UPDATE MAY 5, 2021: SEE OUR UPDATED BLOG PUBLISHED TODAY ON THE LAURENTIAN UNIVERSITY INSOLVENCY CREDITOR PROTECTION PROCEEDINGS STATUS – CLICK HERE FOR THE UPDATE

Laurentian University introduction

Laurentian University is facing a cash crisis and has filed for creditor protection. The Ontario university states that the application under the federal Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) is intended to permit the university to continue running day-to-day operations during restructuring.

The Sudbury, Ontario school is not shutting down and will continue to provide services for students. It states it will keep normal operations and keep classes running. In this Brandon Blog, I talk about what creditor protection in the Canadian context is and why Laurentian University did so.

Laurentian University: What is creditor protection?

In its simplest terms, creditor protection is the protection you get when you start a proceeding with a filing under either the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (Canada) (BIA) or the CCAA. Under the BIA, an individual or company gets that protection in either a consumer or corporate bankruptcy. This safeguard is also obtained by filing under the restructuring proposal provisions of the BIA. A company safeguards itself when it files for restructuring under the CCAA.

Once a filing is done, without getting special permission from the court, none of your creditors can start or continue legal action against the person or the company for the repayment of a debt or for any enforcement action against its assets.

Laurentian University, therefore, received its sheltering once it made its filing under the CCAA. When using this statute, it can also be called CCAA protection.

Below is the section titled “How the Laurentian University restructuring story begins”. I discuss its particular issues leading up to the need to file.

Laurentian University: What is a stay period?

The “time out” that a person or business gets from its creditors is called a stay period (Stay of Proceedings). Upon the agreement of the court to the initial filing, the result is that the court will issue an Order giving the company an initial 30 days of protection from creditors to allow for the preparation of the restructuring proposal called a Plan of Arrangement.

This initial stay can be extended by the court, as long as the judge is convinced that the company is acting in good faith and working expeditiously in sorting through the myriad of issues stopping it from putting together its Plan of Arrangement.

Laurentian University: What does CCAA mean

The CCAA is a Canadian federal law that helps companies in financial difficulties emerge from its difficulties. The company begins its reorganization proceeding with its application to the court and files for creditor protection to avail itself of the process for a company and its creditors to come to an agreement on how to reorganize the company’s debt, while the company continues to operate normally and pay amongst other things, wages to its employees.

One of the biggest advantages of the CCAA is that it allows a business to “hold the fort” while the creditors and the company work out an agreement that will hopefully get the company back on its feet. While operating in this fashion, company management remains in control of running the business. The company does not hand over its assets to a licensed insolvency trustee (Trustee). Rather, the Trustee is appointed by the court to act as Monitor.

As the title sounds, the role of the Monitor is that of the neutral court officer working with the company. The duties of the Monitor include:

  • overseeing and providing supervision of the company’s affairs;
  • assisting in the negotiations with creditors;
  • helping with the drafting of the Plan of Arrangement for describing what the restructuring process will be;
  • report regularly to the court on the progress and details of the restructuring administration, and ultimately,
  • conducting the meetings of the various classes of creditors where voting on the Plan of Arrangement takes place.

Although the CCAA is unique to the country of Canada, other countries have similar restructuring legislation. The most famous is probably Chapter 11 of the US Bankruptcy Code. This is when you normally hear the term “bankruptcy protection“.

laurentian university

Laurentian University files to reorganize university finances

Last Fall, Laurentian University recognized it was in financial trouble. On October 1, 2020, it issued a press release advising that it has financial challenges brought on by the global COVID-19 pandemic and its pre-existing structural deficit. It also announced at that time that it hired Ernst & Young as financial advisors to assist in a further review of its detailed financial results, budgets, and our various initiatives to help identify and analyze any additional opportunities for cost savings or improvement.

On February 1, 2021, facing insolvency, Laurentian University took the step to begin its insolvency proceeding under the CCAA in order to come up with a formal restructuring plan. Since it is in the early stages of the insolvency administration, the actual plan has not yet been developed as Laurentian University needs time to come up with the proper plan. It will be one of many future events I will keep my eye on for you.

From my review of the filing documents, I can tell you what the story is so far.

How the Laurentian University restructuring story begins

“We are working with all stakeholders to ensure a smooth process for students,” said Peter Baxter, the university’s provost and vice-president, academic.”

Who would’ve thought that universities, which are supposed to be institutions of higher learning, would actually run into financial problems and put their stakeholders at risk? But that’s exactly what happened and is the current situation with the Laurentian University insolvency in Sudbury, Ontario. I guess the place was not run by any of the finance profs! It is obviously a stressful time for all students, staff, faculty, and creditors.

Dr. Robert Haché, the President and Vice-Chancellor of the Laurentian University of Sudbury, swore the necessary affidavit on January 30, 2021, in support of Laurentian’s court application for an Initial Order to commence CCAA proceedings. In his affidavit, Dr. Haché stated:

  • Laurentian’s financial issues were first determined as early as 2008-09 when a prior administration gave a budget to the Board that would not be balanced for the 2008-2009 academic year and showed little to no improvement for the future financial prospects of the university absent any revised processes. The budget was approved, but the Board expected the financial situation to be fixed as a top priority item.
  • A Plan for Regaining Sustainability at Laurentian was presented to the school’s Board on December 18, 2008, and again on February 20, 2009. The Board approved the implementation of the plan, expecting to regain financial health over a three-year period.
  • Starting in 2014, Laurentian undertook a $64 million Campus Modernization Project for the construction of approximately 250,000 sq. ft. of classrooms, research, study as well as a public area.
  • The Campus Modernization Project involved Laurentian incurring a substantial amount of long-term debt (approximately $40 million) to pay for the construction of buildings and facilities to modernize the campus in order to accommodate its historical growth and fuel the projected enrolment growth. The university elected to defer repayment of the principal amounts borrowed until after construction was completed, leading to the accrual of further interest.
  • When the Board approved the 2016-17 operating budget, LU forecasted operational deficits continuing through 2021-22 leading to an accumulated operational deficit of greater than $43 million.
  • With the exception of the modest growth experienced in 2020, enrolment has declined each year from 2015 to 2018 and tuition fees remain low, while labour and debt servicing costs have grown substantially.
  • The 10% tuition reduction and tuition freeze ordered by the Province of Ontario beginning in 2019.
  • Laurentian’s academic costs are generally higher as a percentage of total costs than other Ontario universities.
  • Not re-evaluating over the last decade its programs to make sure it is focusing on those the marketplace of students deem relevant and required.
  • The COVID-19 pandemic has made all these issues worse.

From reading his sworn affidavit, I would use one simple word to describe what has led to the Laurentian University insolvencyMISMANAGEMENT! Dr. Haché joined Laurentian University in July 2019. So he has only been involved in this mess for the last 19 months.

What Laurentian University reports its immediate plans are by making this CCAA filing

Laurentian University reported that as at April 30, 2020, it had $358.5 million in assets based on generally accepted accounting principles. Of that total, only $33.2 million is either liquid or near-liquid. As at the same date, its liabilities are:

  • Line of credit $14.4 million
  • Short-term loan $1.4 million
  • Accounts payable and accrued liabilities $22.4 million
  • Accrued vacation pay $1.8 million
  • Deferred revenue $1.0 million
  • Current portion of long-term debt $2.7 million
  • Long-term debt $89 million
  • Employee future benefits liabilities $20.8 million
  • Deferred contributions $38.6 million
  • Deferred capital contributions $129.9 million

This adds up to $322 million. The balance sheet balances because the remainder represents either restricted capital or special purpose endowments.

Laurentian University advised the court that it intends to come back requesting an Amended and Restated Initial Order. Right now, Laurentian has the benefit of the Stay of Proceedings and will not be making any payments on any outstanding amounts owing as of February 1, 2021.

Among other things, the motion in respect of the Amended and Restated Initial Order will seek the following additional relief:

  • extending the Stay of Proceedings to April 30, 2021;
  • suspending Laurentian’s requirement to make certain special payments in respect of its defined benefit pension plan, pending further Order of the Court;
  • suspending Laurentian’s need to reply to requests for information received under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (Ontario) during the Stay of Proceedings, nunc pro tunc to February 1, 2021;
  • the appointment of a mediator, as an officer of the Court and a neutral third party to undertake a mediation of various issues under the supervision of this Court, on an urgent basis;
  • approving Laurentian’s request for a debtor-in-possession credit facility (the “DIP Facility”) borrowing authority up to the principal amount of $25 million to finance its working capital requirements and other general corporate purposes, post-filing expenses and costs during the Stay of Proceedings.

The court has now declared that Laurentian University is insolvent. I will be following this CCAA administration and will write more blogs on material points of special interest as this restructuring winds its way through the court.

Laurentian University summary

I hope you enjoyed the Laurentian University Brandon Blog post. If you are concerned because you or your business are dealing with substantial debt challenges and you assume bankruptcy is your only option, call me. It is not your fault that you remain in this way. You have actually been only shown the old ways to try to deal with financial issues. These old ways do not work anymore.

The Ira Smith Team utilizes new modern-day ways to get you out of your debt difficulties while avoiding bankruptcy. We can get you the relief you need and so deserve.

The tension put upon you in such a time of uncertainty is big. We know your discomfort factors. We will check out your entire situation and design a new approach that is as unique as you and your problems; financial and emotional. We will take the weight off of your shoulders and blow away the dark cloud hanging over you. We will design a debt settlement strategy for you. We know that we can help you now.

We understand that people and businesses facing financial issues need a realistic lifeline. There is no “one solution fits all” method with the Ira Smith Team. Not everyone has to file bankruptcy in Canada. The majority of our clients never do. We help many people and companies stay clear of bankruptcy.

That is why we can establish a new restructuring procedure for paying down debt that will be built just for you. It will be as one-of-a-kind as the economic issues and discomfort you are encountering. If any one of these seems familiar to you and you are serious about getting the solution you need, Contact the Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. group today.

Call us now for a no-cost consultation.

We will get you or your business back up driving to healthy and balanced trouble-free operations and get rid of the discomfort factors in your life, Starting Over, Starting Now.

We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy, and secure during this coronavirus pandemic.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

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Brandon Blog Post

CPP PREMIUMS: A SIMPLE (BUT COMPLETE) GUIDE TO 2021 HOW INCREASED CPP PREMIUMS ARE HITTING WORKERS

cpp premiums
cpp premiums

The Ira Smith Trustee Team hopes that you and your family had a restful holiday season and that you are all safe, healthy and secure.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

If you would prefer to listen to an audio version of this CPP premiums Brandon Blog, please scroll to the bottom and click on the podcast.

CPP premiums introduction

Everyone who is an employee or is self-employed must make Canada Pension Plan (CPP) payments. The payments you make are your CPP premiums. Employers also must contribute to the CPP. If you are self-employed, then the CPP premiums you must pay each year are calculated as part of your annual income tax return filing.

In this blog, I discuss how the Canadian Government has already given a nasty surprise to Canadians for 2021. The planned increase in CPP premiums on January 1 hit some workers for their 2021 CPP contributions more than others because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Canada Pension Plan and CPP premiums

The Canada Pension Plan (CPP) is a government-run pension plan for retired Canadians. It provides a monthly taxed retirement pension benefit that replaces part of your income when you retire. Under the CPP, you obtain the CPP retirement pension plan payments for the rest of your life. To qualify you must:

  • be least 60 years old;
  • have actually made a contribution to the CPP;

Valid contributions can be either from work you carried out in Canada or as the outcome of getting credits from a former spouse or former common-law spouse at the end of the relationship.

CPP premiums and annual maximum pensionable earnings bump-up

For this 2021 year, the earnings ceiling, called the yearly maximum pensionable earnings (YMPE), was supposed to be $60,200, an increase of $1,500 from the 2020 limit. However, the actual amount is higher at $61,600. The maximum annual employee and employer contribution amount is $3,166.45 (up from $2,898.00 in 2020). The maximum annual self-employed contribution level is now $6,332.90 (up from $5,796.00 in 2020).

Provincial finance ministers quietly prodded Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland to put a pause on planned increases in premiums workers and businesses pay into the CPP. So did various business groups. They did not feel it was appropriate this year to have the contribution rate go up. Notwithstanding the support of business groups and each province, it was to no avail.

The originally planned increase on January 1 belongs to a multi-year plan accepted by each province and the Canadian government four years ago. They agreed to improve retired life benefits through the CPP by boosting contributions over time slowly.

The very first bump was in 2019. The province finance ministers asked Finance Minister Freeland to put a pause on this year’s automatic increase. They cited the damage done to workers and businesses as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. They said it isn’t a smart financial decision to take more off workers’ paycheques and also to charge businesses a lot more when so many continue to have a hard time.

cpp premiums
cpp premiums

Moratorium on CPP premiums increase requested by provinces and business groups

So many provincial finance ministers on a call with Finance Minister Freeland, and various business groups independently, asked her to put a pause on this year’s planned increase in CPP premiums and the contribution rate because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The pandemic’s effect on the labour market, which has some groups noting the impact will be felt by some workers more than others. The plan requires contributions to go up alongside the upper limit on earnings that are subject to those premiums. As I have already stated, the YMPE was supposed to be $60,200. This would have meant tax increases of $1,500 from the 2020 limit. But the actual amount is going to be higher at $61,600.

The reason is due to the pandemic’s impact on the labour market and how the YMPE is calculated. Here are the details. The formula to calculate the earnings limit relies on rises in the average weekly earnings for the 12 months finishing June 30, contrasted to the same amount during the preceding 12-month time period. Over the time of the pandemic, average weekly earnings have increased, but not because workers are making more.

Dan Kelly, president of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business said:

“That’s going to be hundreds of dollars of new CPP premiums out of paycheques of middle-income Canadians not because they got a raise, but because the formula has not had a COVID adjustment,” Kelly says. Nevertheless, the government will collect more money than it originally planned through CPP premiums.

Any type of modifications to contribution rates or the YMPE would require the authorization of Parliament as well as seven provinces representing a minimum of two-thirds of the nationwide population. This is a greater bar than what is required to modify the Constitution!

The federal government response for a moratorium on the CPP premiums increase

Ottawa’s answer was not only to have them go up again but do so more than the scheduled increase. Why? The reason is specifically the calculation in the formula that the Feds and provinces signed up for, well before anyone bothered to know how to spell Wuhan!

Here at the details. The labour market got skewed (no, I did not make a spelling mistake) as job losses have hit the lower-income employees more since March 2020. Therefore, if you reduce the earnings at the lower end of the calculation range, you are left with higher wages, on average, when you do the calculation.

The Canadian government claims that is why the general increase is larger than originally scheduled. Dan Kelly calculates that anybody around the maximum limit will see a 9.3 percent rise in CPP premiums, beyond the approximately five-per-cent premium bump baked into the legislation.

A spokeswoman for Ms. Freeland stated stopping the increases agreed to in 2016 would imply reducing future retirement benefits for Canada’s current workers. The spokeswoman went on to say that the government’s leading concern is supporting Canadians, businesses and business owners who are experiencing economic difficulties as the nation weathers the COVID-19 pandemic. With a 2nd wave underway, lots of people across Canada continue to deal with tremendous unpredictability.

I am not sure what current unpredictability from COVID-19 has to do with freezing CPP premiums for each person and business from an increase for 1 or 2 years has to do with the issue, especially since the effect of freezing the increases will not be affected for decades to come, if at all. Nevertheless, that is what was said.

CPP premiums summary

I hope you enjoyed this CPP premiums Brandon Blog post. If you are concerned because you or your business are dealing with substantial debt challenges and you assume bankruptcy is your only option, call me. It is not your fault that you remain in this way. You have actually been only shown the old ways to try to deal with financial issues. These old ways do not work anymore. The Ira Smith Team utilizes new modern-day ways to get you out of your debt difficulties while avoiding bankruptcy. We can get you the relief you need and so deserve.

The tension put upon you is big. We know your discomfort factors. We will check out your entire situation and design a new approach that is as unique as you and your problems; financial and emotional. We will take the weight off of your shoulders and blow away the dark cloud hanging over you. We will design a debt settlement strategy for you. We know that we can help you now.

We understand that people and businesses facing financial issues need a realistic lifeline. There is no “one solution fits all” method with the Ira Smith Team. Not everyone has to file bankruptcy in Canada. The majority of our clients never do. We help many people and companies stay clear of bankruptcy.

That is why we can establish a new restructuring procedure just for you. It will be as one-of-a-kind as the economic issues and discomfort you are encountering. If any one of this seems familiar to you and you are serious about getting the solution you need, contact the Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. group today.

Call us now for a no-cost consultation.

We will get you or your business back up driving to healthy and balanced trouble-free operations and get rid of the discomfort factors in your life, Starting Over, Starting Now.

The Ira Smith Trustee Team hopes that you and your family had a restful holiday season and that you are all safe, healthy and secure.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

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Brandon Blog Post

HOLIDAY SPENDING: HOW DO I STOP OVERSPENDING DURING THE HOLIDAYS?

We hope that you and your family are safe and healthy.

The Ira Smith Trustee Team is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

Holiday spending introduction

The holiday sales days of Black Friday and Cyber Monday holiday retail shopping are over. You may feel you tend to overdo it on your annual holiday spending and that will put you in a poor financial position entering into 2021. On the other hand, COVID-19 has made a lot of people anxious and even depressed. You want to buy something nice this Canadian holiday season for your loved ones and close friends to cheer them up.

So I have created our holiday spending in Canada tips to attempt to help with your holiday shopping. Ideally, by following our suggestions, you will not go into the New Year with more financial debt than you can take care of. You ideally will have avoided the most typical holiday spending mistakes and not end up being one of the miserable holiday shoppers who have awful holiday spending habits.

Holiday spending: Tale of two countries?

The COVID-19 pandemic has devastated the U.S. economy and kept lots of would-be consumers at home this year. Nationwide US consumers are expected to spend much less on gifts and various other holiday-related merchandise than they did last year. So many Americans are hurting because the federal government has not gotten the much-needed relief to people and businesses in the United States.

On the other hand, in Canada, the federal government has distributed relief very quickly. It has come as monetary support for citizens and businesses. It has also come in the form of mortgages and other loan deferrals. By the end of 2019, most, but not all of the Canadian government coronavirus support will end.

As I have written in previous blogs, the combination of government support payments and people staying at home, has resulted in people spending less. They have been able to put money towards paying down debt. Although debt levels are still high, they have been reduced over the last 10 months.

CPA Canada, the association that represents Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada, did a survey on the holiday outlook for this year. According to the CPA Canada survey, most Canadians’ spending will be on gifts: $588 this year versus $583 in 2019. So according to that survey, Canadians will spend, on average, the same this holiday season as last year. Perhaps the only question might be will they do more online shopping this year than in previous years? It will certainly be interesting to see the holiday spending retail sales report early next year.

How will Canadians buy for this year’s holiday spending?

Gifts are only one portion of total holiday spending. Traditionally, travel was always a large part of non-gift holiday spending. The CPA Canada holiday spending survey shows that Canadians have spending plans to spend the same on gifts as they did last year. However, due to the coronavirus pandemic, travel spending will certainly be far less than in prior years. It could even be essentially eliminated. This will create lower total holiday spending in Canada in 2020.

Another major trend sped up by the pandemic is a curbside pick-up. Many Canadians will select this approach for their online purchases. The reality is that Gen Z and Millennials use this approach or get their purchases delivered to them all year round – not just for their holiday spending.

Canadian adults aged 55-plus are traditionally the last to use curbside pickup or delivery. This holiday season may be very different for this group of Canadians. Health concerns may very well drive them to more online shopping this holiday shopping, given the reality of our current environment.holiday spending

Holiday spending budgeting

It is so important that you really think out your holiday spending budget plan before you start spending. I think there are 3 major classifications to your holiday budget: (i) presents; (ii) food and beverage in your home; and (iii) what you might spend in clothing and other amounts because of various holiday parties you would normally be attending. This year I don’t think there will be much spending relating to holiday parties as most, if not all, are cancelled.

To begin setting your holiday spending budget plan, you require to establish 2 different mini-budgets. For gifts, the first thing is to write down the names of everybody you feel you want to get holiday gifts for. Then write down only those who you must buy a gift for. You might not have the ability to afford your “wants”, however just your “needs”.

Check out your regular monthly income and expenses as well as any kind of savings you may have assigned for holiday costs. Also, look at your spending habits to understand what your needs will be over the first few months of the New Year. This will better equip you to understand just how much you can spend overall without going into holiday financial debt.

You also need to then estimate your spending on food and drink for your holiday entertaining this year. That number may very well be less than in previous years as people are being encouraged to not congregate in the same large numbers as they have previously.

Use your holiday spending calculator and take all of this into account, you can set with some degree of confidence your gift and other holiday spending budgets. Then you have to follow them!

My 6 best holiday spending tips

Here are my 6 best holiday spending tips:

  • Purchase with a purpose – You have now determined just how much you can safely spend on each person. Locate the ideal items that meet your costs goal. You do not have to think of price anymore since you will adhere to your specific gift cost limits. You can now focus only on suitable gifts within your budget restrictions. Purchase gifts that fit within your budget plan.
  • Only buy with cash money – You will certainly be enticed to get with your credit card. Using plastic will certainly trigger you to spend too much due to the fact that you will not really feel the purchase. To really feel the purchase, just use cash. When you feel it, you don’t spend too much. You will likewise prevent the awful surprise in January due to the fact that you will not receive an out of control charge card statement that you will not be able to settle fully. You will not only feel wonderful in December; you will have that same or even a better feeling in January.
  • Consider a family present to conserve money – If you feel you won’t have the ability to pay for individual presents, think about the members of the same household and look for a family gift. A gift card for the family may be more affordable than the total of individual presents. Don’t forget to take a look at that choice. Or perhaps one thing for the house that you know all family members will take pleasure in. There are many possibilities for a family present and you will still have an enjoyable shopping experience.
  • You have many talents so give of yourself, not your money – Don’t assume that the only gift that counts is one that costs money. You can actually do a buy nothing day for someone. You have many abilities and talents. Probably one or more would make a great present. If you cannot consider anything unique you can supply that would make a fantastic present, how about your time as an item? Babysit for nieces or nephews, give an afternoon to an ageing relative that needs help either in the house or getting around for errands. These can all count as important presents that won’t cost you anything or much at all. Your time and theirs spent together are much more precious than any type of present you would get in a shop.
  • Visualize the decorations – If you don’t currently have a box of ornaments from years past to use, visualize creatively. The accessories bought at a Dollar Store will look just as wonderful on your tree as ones purchased at a much more expensive specialty shop. Or, use your own creative thinking to make your own decors. If you aren’t certain where to begin, search the numerous videos online to teach you how to make terrific looking decorations that do not set you back too much for materials. Your work, certainly, is cost-free and you will get such joy out of seeing your own creations on your tree and in your home. Why not spread such joy to yourself first; you deserve it.
  • Do you have reward points you either do not see making use of or will quickly expire? – You have been collecting the points. You undoubtedly thought they would certainly give you something extra you may not otherwise be able to afford. Perhaps you might lose them or even otherwise, you don’t see on your own being able to use them in the foreseeable future. So, why not use them for an appropriate gift or gifts for those you need to buy for? You will also save time because more than likely, buying with points means that you are shopping online. You will certainly feel good about using them in this manner due to the fact that you will be making use of the points for someone important in your life. You will also feel good about not having to spend the cash. The people you get the gifts for will cherish your gift, never knowing that you didn’t have to spend cash to get them. It is a win-win.

I wish all of our readers a Happy Chanukah, a Merry Christmas and a healthy, happy and prosperous 2021.

Holiday spending: What if you already have too much debt?

I hope you have enjoyed this holiday spending Brandon’s Blog. Do you or your company have too much debt? Are you or your company in need of financial restructuring? The financial restructuring process is complex. The Ira Smith Team understands how to do a complex restructuring. However, more importantly, we understand the needs of the entrepreneur or the person who has too much personal debt.

You are worried because you are facing significant financial challenges. It is not your fault that you are in this situation. You have been only shown the old ways that do not work anymore. The Ira Smith Team uses new modern ways to get you out of your debt troubles while avoiding bankruptcy. We can get you debt relief freedom.

The stress placed upon you is huge. We understand your pain points. We look at your entire situation and devise a strategy that is as unique as you and your problems; financial and emotional. The way we take the load off of your shoulders and devise a debt settlement plan, we know that we can help you.

We know that people facing financial problems need a realistic lifeline. There is no “one solution fits all” approach with the Ira Smith Team.

That is why we can develop a restructuring process as unique as the financial problems and pain you are facing. If any of this sounds familiar to you and you are serious about finding a solution, contact the Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. team today.

Call us now for a free consultation.

We will get you or your company back on the road to healthy stress-free operations and recover from the pain points in your life, Starting Over, Starting Now.

We hope that you and your family are safe and healthy.

The Ira Smith Trustee Team is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

holiday spending

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MORTGAGE DEFERRAL CANADA IS ENDING: 3 KILLER WAYS TO DEAL WITH COVID-19 RELATED MONEY PROBLEMS

The Ira Smith Trustee Team is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting. We hope that you and your family are safe and healthy.

Mortgage deferral Canada introduction

The bulk of the home mortgage deferral Canada that banks have given to Canadians was approved in March and April. This was the time when the COVID-19 pandemic began taking a financial toll on the country with non-essential businesses shuttered and millions unemployed or seeing their earnings take a deep cut.

The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) proposed actions planned to support federally regulated lenders to make sure that they would not experience problems due to the mortgage deferrals provided to help Canadians. The OSFI mortgage deferral help it provided to the lending institutions enhanced the security of the Canadian economic situation and monetary system when faced with obstacles postured by the coronavirus.

The mortgage deferrals are slowly coming to an end. This Brandon’s Blog discusses what you can do if you fear what your personal fallout will be when the mortgage deferrals end.

How did mortgage deferral Canada work for the borrower?

As of July 30, there were approximately $170 billion in mortgage deferments for the biggest 6 banks. The majority were established to unwind by September 30. Mortgage deferral Canada arrangements between Canadians and their financial institutions were truly an individual conversation. The federal government provided a wide overview, yet the specific arrangements between each borrower and lender were established individually as each case required. The significant style was that if a customer was struggling with financial difficulty because of the COVID-19 lockdown, mortgage payments would be deferred for an agreed-on, short-term amount of time.

Currently, these mortgage deferral Canada setups are slowly ending. The chartered banks are reporting that currently, for those whose deferments have ended, 80% to 90% are current in their payments. That means 10% to 20% of people who had a mortgage deferral Canada deal currently cannot maintain their mortgage payments.

How did mortgage deferral Canada work for the lenders?

OSFI told the federally regulated lending institutions and mortgage insurers they can deal with home mortgage financings for which a payment deferment is approved as being current. Payment deferments of as much as 6 months approved prior to August 31 and repayment deferments of up to 3 months approved after August 30 and on or before September 30 that it need not categorize such mortgages as impaired or revamped.

In April OSFI advised lenders that in circumstances where banks provide home mortgage repayment deferrals, those mortgages can continue to be dealt with as performing loans under the . Consequently, OSFI told the banks they did not need to increase their capital resource requirements based upon the home mortgage deferral Canada arrangements they provided. OSFI additionally told the loan providers that it would not assess such mortgage portfolios as having a larger credit risk.

For all federally regulated banks, OSFI specified that it is prepared to use flexibility for any that might need additional time to satisfy upcoming due dates for filing regulatory returns, on a case-by-case basis.

Where mortgages need to be insured due to being high ratio, there are insurance coverage costs that the lending institutions need to make to the insurer each month. OSFI likewise aided the banks and insurers, such as CMHC, by stating that it will not place the lenders or insurers offside when the monthly insurance premiums were not being paid as a result of the mortgage deferral Canada arrangements. OSFI also stated that deferments will not boost capital charges on unpaid premiums. OSFI told insurance providers that they can deal with a mortgage for which a deferment is granted as performing.

So with these OSFI initiatives, lenders can make mortgage deferral Canada happen and both lenders and mortgage insurance providers can treat the mortgages under these deferred home mortgage settlements and mortgage insurance payments, as not being in default.

Mortgage deferral Canada is ending – what can you do if you believe it will cause financial problems for you

OSFI has just stated that any type of mortgage deferral Canada plans past September 30, 2020, will now be subject to OSFI’s typical policies. People who need to start making their mortgage payments once again, but whose economic situation has not improved since the pandemic hit, are scared. I have read some “what to do” articles if you think you will have trouble making your normal mortgage payments. In my view, several have actually missed the mark. Some I have checked out start explaining how a consumer proposal or bankruptcy can help you.

Just so you know, a consumer proposal or bankruptcy cannot help you with the end of your mortgage deferral Canada. The reason it cannot help you is that your mortgage is a secured debt. Your mortgagee is a secured creditor, assuming its mortgage security is valid. A consumer proposal or bankruptcy is a method of dealing with your unsecured creditors. The mortgagee has rights if you default on your mortgage whether or not you are involved in a formal insolvency process. If you have too much debt and too little income to service all that debt, you may very well need to consider an insolvency filing. But it is not a direct answer to your mortgage deferral Canada ending.

mortgage deferral canada
mortgage deferral canada

So in order, here are my 3 top recommendations of what you could do when your mortgage deferral Canada deal with your lender ends and you believe you will be in financial trouble.

  1. Take a critical look at your family household budget

I cannot emphasize enough just how essential the household budget is to your financial security. A spending plan is a listing of all income and your families’ costs. Do it on a monthly basis. It enables you to prepare how you need to spend your money and if there is anything left over each month for savings for an emergency fund or for investment. Rather than cash just flying out of your pocketbook, you make intentional choices on where you want your cash to go. You’ll never need to doubt at the end of the month where your money went or search for a hole in your wallet.

Numerous Canadians panic every month regarding where the cash will come from to pay their bills. A household budget will give you the direction you need. That direction should give you comfort. It reveals to you just how much you make and also what your costs are. If need be you can decrease unneeded costs or possibly tackle extra work to live within a well-balanced budget plan. No extra panicking at the end of the month.

So if you have a household budget that you follow, look at it carefully. If you don’t’ have one, prepare it immediately. Look at the last 6 months and see what your average monthly income has been and what your average monthly expenses were. List them all out line by line for both income and expenses. Then adjust any line that you believe will change in the coming months. Adding your normal monthly mortgage payment is one of those things that will need to be added.

Then take a look at it and see if you are spending less or more than you earn. If you are spending more, then you need to cut back on certain expenses, increase your income, or a combination of both. Take a critical look and slash any expenses that you can. Then see what that looks like.

If you feel that making your normal monthly mortgage payment will not be a problem, then terrific. Just follow your family budget and each month compare your actual to budget. Make any adjustments you need to along the way. However, keep spending less than you earn.

If your budget shows that you are going to have trouble making your normal monthly mortgage payment, then go on to my next step 2.

  1. Speak to your banker

Get ahead of it. Contact your lender. Let them know that you have a current family budget and it shows that you may need added help when your mortgage deferral Canada deal ends. Your banker will be impressed that you:

  • have a current budget that you are tracking; and
  • you are being proactive and not causing the banker to chase you because you came up on the computer screen as a delinquent mortgagor.

That already makes you the most liked person in the 10% to 20% of people who are experiencing problems paying their mortgage. Hopefully, your lender can work something out for you that will help you.

  1. Call me

If your budget shows that you do not have enough family income to pay all the families’ debts on a monthly basis and your lender cannot do anything to help you, then call me. I will take a critical look at your family budget and get more personal financial details from you. After reviewing all of it, I will give you my best recommendations to meet your unique financial challenges. Keep in mind that this is not your fault. The COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting shutdown of the Canadian economy continues to cause problems for the majority of Canadians.

Mention this blog, and I will not charge you a penny for this help. I truly want you to succeed.

Mortgage deferral Canada summary

I hope you have found this mortgage deferral Canada Brandon’s Blog interesting and helpful. The Ira Smith Team family hopes that you and your family members are remaining secure, healthy and well-balanced. Our hearts go out to every person that has been affected either via misfortune or inconvenience.

We all must help each other to stop the spread of the coronavirus. Social distancing and self-quarantining are sacrifices that are not optional. Families are literally separated from each other. We look forward to the time when life can return to something near to typical and we can all be together once again.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. has constantly used clean, safe and secure ways in our professional firm and we continue to do so.

Income, revenue and cash flow shortages are critical issues facing entrepreneurs, their companies and individual Canadians. This is especially true these days.

If anyone needs our assistance for debt relief Canada COVID-19, or you just need some answers for questions that are bothering you, feel confident that Ira or Brandon can still assist you. Telephone consultations and/or virtual conferences are readily available for anyone feeling the need to discuss their personal or company situation.

The Ira Smith Trustee Team is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting. We hope that you and your family are safe and healthy.

mortgage deferral canada
mortgage deferral canada
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INSOLVENCY CANADA: IS IT ILLEGAL FOR INSOLVENT COMPANY TO APPLY FOR THE CEWS

The Ira Smith Trustee Team is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting. We hope that you and your family are safe, healthy and secure.

If you would prefer to listen to the audio version of this insolvency Canada Brandon’s Blog, please scroll to the bottom and click play on the podcast.

insolvency canada
insolvency canada

Insolvency Canada introduction

Canadian business restructuring, a type of insolvency Canada, has been in the news lately and no doubt will continue to be for some time. The COVID-19 pandemic, the lockdown and general fear have affected everyone; both Canadian business, employees and all other Canadians. Everyone is forecasting that business insolvencies will rise as a result of the coronavirus.

An interesting question posed to us recently is, is it illegal for an insolvency Canada company to apply for the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy (CEWS). I have written a couple of blogs specifically on the CEWS previously:

In this Brandon’s Blog, I discuss the concept of CEWS and try to answer the question about insolvent companies applying for COVID-19 support.

Insolvency Canada CEWS refresher

The CEWS was established for an initial 12-week period from March 15 to June 6, 2020, offering a 75-per-cent wage help to qualified firms. Then on May 15, 2020, PM Justin Trudeau announced a CEWS expansion for 3 additional months to August 29. The CEWS safeguards work by assisting organizations to maintain workers on the payroll as well as also encouraging firms to re-hire staff members previously laid off. To date, 296,030 employers, representing 924,970 applications, have applied to the CEWS program.

Former Finance Minister Bill Morneau then announced in July that the CEWS extension would consist of program changes that would broaden the reach of the program. It would certainly offer much better-targeted assistance to guarantee that more workers can return to their work without delay as the economy reboots.

The modifications announced in July for the CEWS extension would:

  • Prolong the program up until November 21, 2020, with the intent to provide additional support up until December 19, 2020.
  • Make the aid available to a more variety of companies to include those with a revenue decline of less than 30%.
  • Provide a slowly lowering base help to all eligible companies. This would assist various companies with much less than a 30% earnings loss get aid to keep employees.
  • Present a top-up aid of around an added 25 percent for companies that have really been most adversely affected by the pandemic. This would be particularly practical to firms in markets that are recovering far more slowly.
  • Offer assurance to firms that have really already made business decisions for July as well as August by ensuring they would not have their benefits less than they would have had under the previous CEWS program.
  • Address particular issues brought to the government’s attention by various stakeholder groups.

By helping people get back to work and sustaining companies as they try to grow their income, these modifications gave companies some certainty that they needed to recall workers. It is very possible that some employers would fall into an insolvency Canada category.

Insolvency Canada: The current CEWS statistics

The Canadian government has approved 910,940 of the total applications so far. The approved applications by value are:

Under $100K 863,700

$100K to $1M 44,990

$1M to $5M 2,010

Over $5M 240

Total 940,940

To look at is it illegal for an insolvent company to apply for CEWS, we first need to see what the requirements are. Could it be that applications have been made by insolvency Canada employers? For sure it is!

Insolvency Canada: When is an employer eligible for the CEWS

The CEWS was first set up through the passage of BILL C-14, A second Act respecting certain measures in response to COVID-19. It received Royal Assent on April 11, 2020. It establishes the rules for the CEWS program, as amended and extended.

For the purposes of the wage subsidy, an eligible employer is:

  • a company or a trust, besides a corporation or a trust fund that is excluded from tax obligation under Part I of the Income Tax Act or is a public institution;
  • an individual aside from a trust;
  • a registered charity (other than a public institution);
  • a person that is exempt from tax obligation under Part I of the Income Tax Act (aside from a public institution), that is:
    • a farming organization;
    • a board of trade or a chamber of commerce;
    • a non-profit corporation for SRED activities;
    • a labour organization or society;
    • a benevolent or fraternal benefit society or order; and
    • a non-profit organization;
  • a partnership where each member of which is an individual or partnership in this listing;
  • a prescribed company, including certain Indigenous companies or businesses.

As you can see, the list is very exhaustive. The legislation does not exclude an insolvent company or mention anything about insolvency Canada. The legislation also does not exclude a company that has filed for a corporate restructuring being either a proposal under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (Canada) (BIA) or under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (Canada) (CCAA).

Insolvency Canada: How does an eligible employer qualify for the wage subsidy?

In order to get the wage subsidy in respect of a specific claim period, an eligible company needed to have on March 15, 2020, an open payroll program account with the CRA and was using that account to make its payroll remittances.

Concerning the revenue test, a company’s income for the subsidy includes its revenue earned in Canada on an arm’s length basis, calculated utilizing the employer’s regular bookkeeping approach. Companies can pick to calculate their earnings using either a cash basis or the accrual technique of bookkeeping. Companies have to make use of the method they select when they first make an application for the CEWS for the duration of the program. Employers cannot combine the methods.

When a qualified employer has computed its qualifying revenue for each and every relevant claim period, it would determine if it has actually experienced the needed reduction in income to qualify for the wage subsidy for that claim period. However, the company is under no obligation to prove that the decrease in income is connected to the COVID-19 situation. If it does not qualify for one claim period, it is not barred from determining if it qualifies for any other claim period.

There is nothing in the legislation that disqualifies an insolvent company that is an eligible employer from calculating if it meets the test for eligibility for the CEWS. The phrase “insolvency Canada” does not appear anywhere.

Insolvency Canada: It is not illegal for an insolvent company to apply for the CEWS

From my research, as described above, I have not found anything in the legislation that established the CEWS that would make it illegal for an insolvency Canada employer to apply for the CEWS. If you think about it, this makes sense.

The Canadian government was worried that companies shutting down meant all workers were laid off and be applying for the Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB). As the economy opened up again, the government wanted to make it easier for businesses to bring back some or all of their workers in a very unsettling and uncharted time. The aim of all the Canadian government support programs is to give assistance to struggling companies.

There is an implicit assumption that companies could very well be insolvent and would therefore not be able to reopen unless they had financial support. So not only is it not illegal for an insolvent company to apply for the CEWS, it is quite logical that an insolvent company would not reopen or if it did, not hire back many workers.

This is, in my view, one of the reasons why the CEWS was established; to bring back Canadian workers to companies that could not otherwise afford to pay its employees if it could not receive back a refund for what it was spending on wages or salaries.

Insolvency Canada: How would the CEWS be treated under a formal restructuring

Whether the company is restructuring under the BIA or CCAA, the treatment of the CEWS is the same. The CEWS is taxable. You need to include the amount you get on the company’s or business’s income tax return when calculating your taxed revenue.

You will certainly likewise be expected to report the amount of the CEWS that was used to pay each of your staff members’ incomes by utilizing a unique code in the “other information” area at the end of the respective employee’s T4 slip. That specific information on the reporting needs has not yet been made public by the government. It presumably will be before the end of the year.

So in either a BIA or CCAA insolvency business restructuring, the CEWS should be shown as:

  • revenue in any cash flow statement prepared with anticipated receipt dates;
  • income for accounting and financial statement purposes; and
  • disclosed in the Trustee’s/Monitor’s reporting to stakeholders.

If it turns out that the employer involved in a formal restructuring did not qualify for a CEWS payment for one or more of the periods that it applied and received one, then it is a liability to the government. How is that handled in the restructuring? There could be two answers. From my research, I do not see this specifically being addressed.

You may need to return all or part of the CEWS you have actually already received if you:

  • send to the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) any type of modifications to a previous application;
  • terminate an application;
  • made a calculation or data mistake for a claim;
  • learn you do not qualify after getting a subsidy payment for a claim made; or
  • receive a notice from the CRA that, following an evaluation, your claim has actually been lowered or disallowed.

Any type of CEWS overpayment you received that is not returned will be subject to interest charges. In the very next insolvency Canada section, I discuss what kind of liability a CEWS overpayment would be in a formal insolvency restructuring.

Insolvency Canada: What kind of liability is a CEWS overpayment

The CEWS is a subsidy payment made to you by CRA based on an application the insolvent company makes. Unlike a claim for unremitted source deductions or HST, it is not an amount the insolvent company collected, held in trust for and failed to remit to CRA. So as far as I am concerned, it is not a trust claim. It would be an ordinary unsecured claim.

The overpayment claim may not necessarily be caught in the restructuring. If the insolvent company applied for the CEWS AND received the subsidy payment BEFORE making the restructuring filing under either the BIA or CCAA, then I believe it would be an ordinary unsecured claim in the restructuring. However, if the company applied for the CEWS AFTER filing for restructuring, regardless of the claim period, the overpayment claim would be a post-filing claim and not caught in the restructuring. All of the overpayment would have to be repaid notwithstanding the formal restructuring.

If not repaid, presumably CRA would offset any other amount payable to the company, such as for HST input tax credits, against the CEWS overpayment liability in such an insolvency Canada situation.

Again, I caution that none of this appears in the CEWS legislation. It is my opinion based on my experience and the review of the relevant legislation.

Insolvency Canada summary

I hope you have found this Insolvency Canada CEWS Brandon’s Blog interesting and helpful. The Ira Smith Team family hopes that you and your family members are remaining secure, healthy and well-balanced. Our hearts go out to every person that has been affected either via misfortune or inconvenience.

We all must help each other to stop the spread of the coronavirus. Social distancing and self-quarantining are sacrifices that are not optional. Families are literally separated from each other. We look forward to the time when life can return to something near to typical and we can all be together once again.

Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. has constantly used clean, safe and secure ways in our professional firm and we continue to do so.

Income, revenue and cash flow shortages are critical issues facing entrepreneurs, their companies and individual Canadians. This is especially true these days.

If anyone needs our assistance for debt relief Canada COVID-19, or you just need some answers for questions that are bothering you, feel confident that Ira or Brandon can still assist you. Telephone consultations and/or virtual conferences are readily available for anyone feeling the need to discuss their personal or company situation.

The Ira Smith Trustee Team is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting.

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