The first day of the new season saw the Government introduce
the Personal Property Securities Amendment (PPS Leases) Bill 2017.
As the element in
parentheses indicates, the Bill concerns an amendment to the manner in which
the PPSA deals with leasing arrangements.
At present the PPSA only
applies to leases that run for longer than one year, are for a shorter period
but allow for extensions that would take them beyond one year, or are for an
indefinite period.
The new Bill
basically takes that one year qualifying period and extends it to two years.
But before anyone
suggests holding off on lodging that backlog of registrations you’ve got piling
up, the Bill (if enacted) isn’t intended to apply retrospectively and it’s
anybody’s guess as to when it will actually come into effect given that the
last amendment of this nature took 15 months to pass and another 3 months to
get Royal Assent!
Clearly a lot of
lobbying has been taking place behind the scenes because, at least from my
point of view, this Bill is something of a surprise – there was certainly no recommendation
in the official review of the PPSR to extend the PPS Lease period.
However, the Bill
does incorporate an element of one of the Review’s recommendations where
indefinite leases are concerned. If
passed, indefinite leases will only require registration once the goods being
leased have actually been in the possession of the Grantor for the two year
period.
While this will
obviously be a substantial relaxation of the rules for businesses that
essentially deal in short term hires but don’t explicitly identify a maximum
end date, it will be interesting to see how this ties in to the Corporations
Act - s588FL of which pretty much requires registration within 20 business days
of the leasing agreement being signed to avoid risking losing hired goods to any
liquidator appointed within 6 months of the actual registration date.
UPDATE: This Bill was formally passed on Thursday 11th May and will come into effect as soon as it has Royal Assent.
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