Contractor Among Contractors

Originally Posted by
Cautious Newbie
The IP have said that they can only be appointed as the Insolvency Practitioners once my company’s funds have been transferred to their bank account. The bond will then be issued to protect the funds shortly afterwards. They said that, whilst they understand my concern, that this is common practice.
Have you maybe misunderstood something here?
My expectation would be the liquidator would only have access to your company's funds after they're legally appointed. The bond applies from the date they're appointed. In practice the specific payment for bonding on your case would only be paid in arrears, but the insurance would still cover you from appointment date.
Ie normal order of things:
1) liquidator appointed, insurance is in place,
2) liquidator gets control of your company's funds,
3) liquidator pays for bond from your company's funds.
Having said that, possibly you haven't misunderstood at all. I know some liquidators promise funds on day of appointment, or within 7 days. From my experience that simply isn't possible by doing things the normal route, due to all the steps required, and reliance on action from your company's bank. I would guess they get around this by asking you to instigate the transfer before they're legally appointed. If that is the case, then from a very practical perspective it may well work out ok, but to my mind the risk is large. You're voluntarily sending all your company's funds to a third party bank account controlled by someone who (at that point) has no legal relationship or responsibility to your company. That is not normal liquidation procedure, but I appreciate normal liquidation procedure can be painfully slow (we tend to suggest people expect 4-6 weeks between appointment and first distribution).