Allied Farmers chases money owed on Hanover loans
Allied Farmers Ltd has appointed a receiver to a company associated with the failed Five Mile Holdings development near Queenstown in a bid to chase a loan accruing $23,000 of unpaid interest each day.
The Taranaki-based rural supplies and finance company purchased the assets of Hanover Finance and United Finance last year in a share for debenture swap. The company's share price fell this week after it reported an interim loss and reduced the value of the acquired loan book. Its share price closed down 0.3c to 7.6c today, which is well off the 53.6c year-high in April last year.
The company said after the market closed on Friday that its Allied Farmers Investments Ltd unit has placed Property Ventures Ltd into the hands of receiver, Grant Thornton in an attempt to recover a $41.5 million loan to Five Mile Holdings Ltd, which is in receivership.
The loan, which is accruing interest at more than $23,000 a day, is guaranteed by Property Ventures Ltd.
Allied Farmers managing director Rob Alloway said that this was the first of many such actions involving borrowers who have failed to meet their obligations.
Allied Farmers holds a general security agreement over the assets of Property Ventures, which is owned by a number of investors including Christchurch property developer, David Henderson.
Property Ventures has interests in more than 30 subsidiaries, including those associated with Hotel So, and the South Of Lichfield entertainment and retail precinct in Christchurch.
"We will use all reasonable means available to us to collect outstanding principal and interest on loans which were entered into in good faith," said Mr Alloway.
"We are not going to sit back and watch borrowers skip their obligations," he said.
The Five Mile Development exposure has been provided for in Allied's accounts and 23 hectares of land at the development has been put in a special purpose vehicle called 5M No2 Ltd, which Allied owns.
Separately, Grant Thornton was this week appointed receiver to a company called Peninsula Road, which owns the land that stage two and three of the large Kawarau Falls Station development in Queenstown will be built on.
Peninsula Road is owned by Auckland property developer Nigel McKenna. The receiver was appointed by Fortess Credit Corp but Allied Farmers is a second mortgage holder and Allied said it may take some secondary action on that receivership.
Allied's exposure to Kawarau Falls amounted to $88 million of principal, of which 75 percent was associated with the later stages, Mr Alloway said.
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Comments and questions13
Hi Hanover investors. What agreat deal you ended up with! Makes due dilligance a farce but welcome to NZ financial markets- the last outpost of the wild wild west of the financial world.Cullen of course did nothing because he didn't believe you had the right to have savings in the first place but can anyone explain why Key and English allow rort after rort?
NZ will not attract international finance companies whist the "Rip - off" is the standard business technique.
Allied are just trying pretend they are doing something while tilting at windmills.
The Allied board should be up in court for being criminally stupid and putting the company in such a bad position.
Hendersons company does not have any cash or assets and Hanover were his friends so it is very clear that Allied was sold a pup there.
They most definitely are going to have to sit back and watch that borrower at least skip his obligations.
Who wants to enter the sweep for the Allied recievership? Only a few dates left!!
I give it 6 months without any more shonky equity deals being conjured up. I wonder if Allied will be booking the penalty inerest as earned to up their revenue lines knowing full well they will never collect it!!
Given accepted Kiwi saver practise they will probably book any recovered loans to income as well as uncollectable unterest. Still the Directors will either give it the ok or just claim that no one told them! Are Brash and Banks on the Board?
I think the reason the Allied - Hanover deal went through was because they were both headed for receivership, but this "good news merger" created time. But the end result will be the same.
I should feel sorry for the investors but I don't. How many times does this have to happen before Kiwis wake up.
The level of stupidity shown by Hanover/Allied continues to amaze me. Like Shaun I find it difficult to feel sorry for these fools.
Sweep closing - no dates in the next 12 months left. Like to thank chief advisors who produced the opportunity the scott free never to be prosecuted teflon coated Hotchin and Watson partnership!
Another sad day for corporate governance in NZ. the legislators and regulators are well out of their depth. They lack the will capacity and capability to legislate and regulate for good governance.
Instead they act like the 3 monkeys frightened to take any effective action in case they upset any of the Directors and promoters.
The amazing thing is that no financial commentators with any clout have really exposed this. Hotchin's assertion that he and Watson put $76m into Hanover (nonsense - they merely put back in a bundle of over-valued assets) was calmly accepted by the pundits. If they wore that one, its no surprise they did not register alarm at the recoverable value of 'assets' like the 5-mile deal. Dave Henderson's not to blame; as stated here, it's the woeful standard of any so-called due diligence.
Dave Henderson's not to blame; as stated here, it's the woeful standard of any so-called due diligence.
Yeah no one is to blame. We will just blame 2 words put together by acountants and lawyers. Its just the recession, otherwise it would all have been fine and dandy. Just blame the world wide recession. McKenna and henderson would be in gold plated Rolls Royces now if it wasn't for that dam recession and due diligence!
Which accounting firm performed the "Due dilligance"?
I can't understand one thing. Why don't they use an ez saver program? I didn't try it on a big scale, but for individuals it works great and you have nothing to worry about. If they would give it a try, I'm sure they'd have the money now.
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