Tranona
Well-Known Member
Not contradictory - just pointing out that there are many different ways of structuring the finances of the business but that the business needs to earn economic rent in the broadest sense to survive. Can't understand your comment about "middle men" in this context. The business needs premises to operate and it is irrelevant from a cost point of view who owns the premises if the economic cost is included in the price of the output. You can put forward arguments that the owner is not charging an economic rent, which I suspect may be the case here - that is the owner is subsidising the business, but it could equally be a third party owner prepared to accept a lower rent rather than nothing as many owners of retail property are doing just now.
The real danger in this case is that the land and buildings have a completely different value if put to a different use. This has happened with many similar waterfront properties that are no longer viable as bases for manufacturing businesses and are now used for housing, leisure or multi use distribution activities.
Not sure about customers suffering from "ring fencing" - it is usually unsecured creditors that bear the brunt of the downsides of company failures, particularly suppliers - like one of Northshores who will have to sell an extra £50k worth of goods to recover their losses - big money for a family business that employs only 4 people. The only customers that lose directly are those who have paid for goods or services that have yet to be delivered. We know in this case there are probably few, if any, because their contracts protect their payments through either a client account or through transfer of title of work in progress. This is very different from failures in the retail trade where it is common to pay unsecured deposits for some goods or buy vouchers for exchange for goods in the future. It is much more difficult to avoid some of these - for example, try and buy furniture of your choice without paying out 20% deposit with no security.
If you really want to know what "sucks value" out have a look at the price that Southerly charge for fitting extras compared with even the retail cost of the components used, ignoring any discount they might get. In conceptual terms the added value of the boatbuilding process is less than the costs of achieving it. So the products are too expensive, but it is not the rent for the premises (whoever owns them) that is the cause of the high costs. If you have ever been to the factory you will understand where the money went and perhaps why the volume sales achieved was insufficient to support the fixed cost base.
The real danger in this case is that the land and buildings have a completely different value if put to a different use. This has happened with many similar waterfront properties that are no longer viable as bases for manufacturing businesses and are now used for housing, leisure or multi use distribution activities.
Not sure about customers suffering from "ring fencing" - it is usually unsecured creditors that bear the brunt of the downsides of company failures, particularly suppliers - like one of Northshores who will have to sell an extra £50k worth of goods to recover their losses - big money for a family business that employs only 4 people. The only customers that lose directly are those who have paid for goods or services that have yet to be delivered. We know in this case there are probably few, if any, because their contracts protect their payments through either a client account or through transfer of title of work in progress. This is very different from failures in the retail trade where it is common to pay unsecured deposits for some goods or buy vouchers for exchange for goods in the future. It is much more difficult to avoid some of these - for example, try and buy furniture of your choice without paying out 20% deposit with no security.
If you really want to know what "sucks value" out have a look at the price that Southerly charge for fitting extras compared with even the retail cost of the components used, ignoring any discount they might get. In conceptual terms the added value of the boatbuilding process is less than the costs of achieving it. So the products are too expensive, but it is not the rent for the premises (whoever owns them) that is the cause of the high costs. If you have ever been to the factory you will understand where the money went and perhaps why the volume sales achieved was insufficient to support the fixed cost base.