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The voluntary administrators of Helius Therapeutics, backed by NBR Rich Lister Guy Haddleton, have been granted leave by the High Court to delay the crucial watershed meeting for the medicinal cannabis company for three months. Daniel Stoneman and Neale Jackson of Calibre Partners were appointed voluntary administrators in early March after the latest casualty in the struggling sector had a sustained period of trading losses due to high operating costs and a challenging regulatory environment. Administrators have to hold a second watershed meeting of creditors within 25 working days of being appointed to decide the insolvent company’s fate, but Stoneman said they asked for more time to realise the assets. They’re in negotiations with several parties under a “short process” to buy the company although stock with a fixed shelf life is being sold separately. Stoneman said he couldn’t comment yet on how much Helius owed. The administration didn't impact its clinic business, CannaPlus.
Current Department of Corrections chief executive Jeremy Lightfoot has been appointed chief executive of the new Ministry for Cities, Environment, Regions and Transport. The ministry is expected to be up and running on July 1, with Parliament’s Environment Select Committee hearing submissions this week on the Environment (Disestablishment of Ministry for the Environment) Amendment Bill. Public Service Commissioner Sir Brian Roche said Lightfoot was an impressive, experienced leader with a reputation for delivery. “He understands how to get policy, funding and delivery working in step and has worked closely with councils, Māori and communities, experience that matters for the challenges the Ministry has been established to address,” Roche said. Lightfoot will begin his new job on April 27.
Kiwi company Dexibit, which provides big data analytics to visitor attractions globally, has been acquired by Accesso Technology Group for US$12.1 million ($21m). The deal with the AIM-listed technology solutions provider to the leisure and attractions sector involved an initial payment of US$7.1m, with a further US$5m payable over three years, subject to performance conditions. Dexibit will form a new product, Accesso Intelligence, which will connect all client data from ticketing and food to visitor reviews. The Kiwi platform has 40 customers across more than 75 venues, with annual recurring revenue of US$1.4m. Dexibit was set up in Auckland in 2015 by CEO Angie Judge, her husband Justin Kearney and Jeff Feldman who later sold out. Judge and Kearney owned 41% of the company between them while Icehouse Ventures held 22% and the government-backed Aspire Fund had a 6.9% stake. Judge said "together we can build something genuinely transformative for the industry".
The Commerce Commission says it is likely to approve grid operator Transpower’s plan to replace and expand the Cook Strait electricity cables. The plan involves capital investment of $1.14 billion, which would be recouped from electricity companies over time and therefore requires regulatory approval. In a statement, Associate Commissioner Nathan Strong said the HVDC cables were critical transmission infrastructure. “Installing a fourth cable at the same time unlocks an additional 200MW of capacity, which can reduce long-term electricity market costs and enable the development of lower-cost renewables generation in the South Island. This has been shown to provide a long-term benefit to consumers.” Submissions on the regulator’s draft decision close on April 29.
Genesis Energy has appointed Emma Oettli as chief financial officer, two days after announcing the resignation of incumbent Julie Amey.
In a statement to the NZX, Genesis said Oettli was currently its general manager of portfolio management and had previously held senior finance roles with Genesis and the banking sector.
“Emma has had a very successful career and brings a real depth of knowledge of both the sector and Genesis,” said chief executive Malcolm Johns.
“Emma is well placed to lead delivery of our capital programme and performance uplift programme.”
Oettli takes up her new role on April 15, after Amey’s departure on April 10.
National law firm Duncan Cotterill has acquired Blenheim-based Radich Law.
The move will see Miriam Radich join as a partner, while Peter Radich joins as a consultant.
Duncan Cotterill had the most partners of any firm in New Zealand as at the end of June, 2025, according to data obtained for NBR’s The Lawyers series. The firm then had 55 partners, alongside a further 142 lawyers. It has offices in Auckland, Wellington, Nelson, Christchurch, and Queenstown.
Duncan Cotterill chair Brian Nathan said Radich Law helped the firm build its network of regional offices.
“Clients in Blenheim will enjoy continuity in their relationships with Peter and Miriam Radich and their team, now supported by the depth and breadth of Duncan Cotterill’s national capabilities.”
Peter and Miriam, meanwhile, said in a statement, the move marked a new chapter for the firm.
“We remain the same people our clients know and rely on, now backed by the resources and specialist expertise of a national firm.”