Publication
Published March 24, 2020
The “distress preferred share” (DPS) provisions in the Income Tax Act (Canada) (the Tax Act) present an opportunity to reduce financing costs for a borrower. At the same time, a DPS restructuring can give the lender equal or better after-tax income on its investment, without sacrificing its security and priority. In the current economic climate, DPS may be an option for clients that want to reduce borrowing costs by restructuring their debt.
Of course, lenders will need to get on board. Essentially, a lender will be agreeing to swap its debt for preferred shares that pay a lower return. Why would they agree to do this? For several reasons:
Dividends on DPS are effectively tax-free for the lender. The following example illustrates how the economics of DPS dividends versus interest payments works:
Normally, it does not pay for a lender to convert a loan into preferred shares. The shares will typically carry a fixed dividend and a fixed retraction price, and thus will be “taxable preferred shares” and “term preferred shares” under the Tax Act. Dividends received on these shares are normally subject to special taxes. However, the special taxes do not apply to DPS shares.
These special benefits for distress preferred shares are temporary: they apply for five years from the date of issue of the shares.
The definition of "distress preferred share" is complex. In general terms the distress preferred share must be a preferred share, or otherwise have debt-like characteristics, and be issued:
In all cases, the proceeds from the issue of the share must be used by the issuer or a non-arm’s length corporation to finance a business that was carried on in Canada immediately before the share was issued.
When a distressed debtor is not in receivership or bankruptcy proceedings, it will have to satisfy the "financial difficulty" leg in part (iii) of this definition. Historically, in these cases, lenders have required a ruling from Canada Revenue Agency before they are prepared to convert their loan into a lower-yielding preferred share. We do not know yet whether this will continue to be true given the severity of the current economic climate.
In order to ensure that the lender retains security over the borrower's assets (as opposed to simply becoming an equity-holder), the CRA has approved variations of the structure as described below. The issuer of DPS is not the corporation that is in financial difficulty (i.e. the Original Borrower), but a single-purpose wholly owned subsidiary (New SPV).
New SPV's share capital consists of common shares, and non-voting preferred shares that will be the DPS. The DPS terms include a periodic dividend at a fixed rate, and have retraction rights in the event of default. Additionally, the shares have a mandatory redemption one month prior to their 5th anniversary.
New SPV advances the proceeds from the preferred shares to its parent corporation, the Original Borrower as an interest-free loan (the New Loan). The New Loan is secured by a charge on the assets of the Original Borrower. The Original Borrower uses the proceeds from the New Loan to repay the original loan.
Another method to get the same result is that New SPV uses the proceeds from the preferred shares to purchase the original loan from the lender, along with the accompanying security in the Original Borrower's assets.
The lender, the Original Borrower and New SPV enter into support arrangements whereby:
The Canada Revenue Agency has provided many rulings on this type of structure.