Torchlight gets money, seen at the table for SCF fallout
Torchlight Fund may have invested in South Canterbury Finance (SCF) hoping for a receivership to put itself at the table for the sorting out process, according to an investor in Pyne Gould Corp (PGC).
PGC confirmed today that the $100 million loan facility provided to SCF by parties including Torchlight Fund No 1 LP has been repaid in full as part of the government bailout of SCF. Torchlight had a minority stake in the loan, PGC said.
Torchlight Investment Group is owned by PGC subsidiary Perpetual Group and its directors are John Duncan, Jeff Greenslade, George Kerr and Bryan Mogridge. It was previously known as Perpetual Asset Management Ltd.
Torchlight Investment Group was the arranger of a $100 million loan facility which provided funding to SCF with a priority ranking.
The Government decided to pay out Torchlight to simplify the receivership of SCF.
"We suspect that Torchlight has invested in SCF actually hoping for receivership. By placing itself at the table Torchlight increases the possibility of playing a significant part in any sorting out of SCF should it be wound up," Aspiring Asset Management, a PGC shareholder, said in its June quarter newsletter.
PGC has a 15 percent stake in Torchlight Fund, according to Aspiring Asset Management. It also manages the fund.
Aspiring said that the failure of SCF may affect the propensity of investors to put money with second-tier finance organisations when the Government guarantee ends in December next year.
"But on the other hand it would also reduce competition," Aspiring said.
Marac, the finance company business owned by PGC, was skilfully going down the route of upsizing via merger and looking to become a bank, Aspiring said.
Perpetual Group Ltd chief executive John Duncan declined to say what interest rate Torchlight Find was receiving on its loan to SCF and also declined to say who the investors in Torchlight Fund are other than PGC.
PGC said Torchlight Fund has the backing of a range of domestic and international investors and investment companies, including leading specialists in credit and real estate private equity.
It has capital of $150m following a successful capital raising in July.
Torchlight Fund specialises in making counter-cyclical investments at a time of low liquidity in the banking and investment sectors. Following the successful investment into SCF it would continue to look for situations to provide funding, PGC said.
The repayment comes at a time of debate about the unintended consequences of the Crown's Retail Deposit Guarantee Scheme.
It has been reported that SCF received a rush of deposits because of the guarantee and then came under funding pressure as depositors withdrew money ahead of a reduction in the amount guaranteed in the extended scheme operating from this October through to the end of next year.
Also, many finance companies collapsed before the scheme was introduced in October 2008 and investors suffered losses.
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Comments and questions4
Good strategy Torchlight but assisting the collapse did not get you the spoils after all. One would hope that a bunch of predators like Mr Kerr and his mates get what they deserve and that is not a slice of the Company they have held to ransom.
Who says that Anon.
Old Mother Hubbards Cupboard is already bare.
With the crooks Mair brought in the government will be left with bones and no marrow. Just one big bad bank.
The goodies will have already disappeared.
Only things that maybe left are Scales and Dairy Holdings.
Good old PGG, but I'm incredulous about reports coming out that once SCF was in the GG scheme this lead to reckless lending from the end of 2008 onwards. Didn't anyone in NZ know that the entire worldwide financial market has been in shock since September 2008 with Lehman Brothers going bankrupt, Iceland nearly going bankrupt, Greece now being more or less bankrupt, traders using the stock exchange as a gambling casino. That's why the government came up with the GG scheme.
Everywhere else in the world people were terribly careful from the end of 2008 but no in NZ, the financial institutions go reckless. Unbelievable.
it seams a good strategy, but in practice is not give good results. they could gain from losses by put their money into online casino. it is a 50% chance to win.
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