Administration is a formal legal process for companies that are insolvent or on the brink of insolvency. Primarily used in the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth countries, it functions as a corporate emergency room, designed to give a struggling business a fighting chance at survival. It's broadly similar to the Chapter 11 bankruptcy process in the United States. When a company enters administration, an administrator—a licensed insolvency professional—is appointed to take control. Their primary job is to manage the company’s affairs and assets with the main goal of rescuing the business as a going concern. If a full rescue isn't possible, the administrator aims to achieve a better outcome for the company's creditors than if the company were simply wound up immediately through liquidation. This process provides a crucial moratorium, which is a legal freeze on all legal actions against the company, giving the administrator breathing room to assess the situation and formulate a plan without pressure from individual creditors suing the company.
A company can enter administration in a couple of ways. The company's directors can appoint an administrator if they realize the business is insolvent and can't pay its debts. Alternatively, a major creditor (often a bank holding a charge over the company's assets) or the court can initiate the process. Once appointed, the administrator effectively becomes the company's temporary CEO. They take full control from the directors and their primary duty shifts from the company's shareholders to its creditors. The administrator has 8 weeks to send a statement of proposals to all creditors, outlining the company's financial situation and their plan for the future. These proposals detail how they intend to achieve one of the three statutory purposes of administration.
The administrator must act in the best interests of all creditors and will pursue one of three hierarchical objectives. Think of it as a waterfall: they must aim for the first objective, and only if that's not reasonably practicable can they move to the second, and so on.
For an ordinary investor, a company entering administration is almost always catastrophic news. The core principle to understand is the hierarchy of payment. When a company is in administration, any money raised from selling the business or its assets is used to pay off debts in a strict order:
In the vast majority of administrations, the company's liabilities far exceed the value of its assets. After the top tiers of creditors are paid, there is simply no money left. This means the shares held by investors become completely worthless. A plunging share price for a company rumored to be in trouble might seem like a bargain, but it's a classic value trap. From a value investing perspective, which prioritizes the preservation of capital, buying shares in a company on the verge of administration is pure speculation, not investing. The probability of a permanent and total loss of capital is exceptionally high. Your best move is to steer clear.