tmmonline.nz  |   landlords.co.nz        About Good Returns  |  Advertise  |  Contact Us  |  Terms & Conditions  |  RSS Feeds

NZ's Financial Adviser News Centre

GR Logo
Last Article Uploaded: Friday, April 19th, 6:45PM

Investments

rss
Latest Headlines

Strategic book value deficit at $195.5m

Strategic Finance, placed in receivership in March and liquidation in July, has a book value deficit of $195.5 million, according to the first report from the liquidators.

Thursday, September 2nd 2010, 12:16PM

The deficit is based on the stricken firm's estimated assets and liabilities as at May 31 and confirms unsecured creditors are likely to get nothing.

Liquidators John Cregten and Andrew McKay said they won't call a meeting of creditors because they "believe the value of the assets of the company available for distribution to unsecured, non-preferential creditors is likely to be zero."

On that basis, a creditors' meeting would impose an "unreasonable" additional expense on funds available to complete the liquidation.

The financial statement shows Strategic had some $11.7 million in cash, assets and accounts receivable that haven't been specifically charged and are available to preferential creditors. Charged assets include the net property loan book at $234 million, making assets available to secured creditors $246.7 million.

Against that comes money owed to Bank of Scotland of $76 million and secured debenture stock of $291.7 million, leaving a deficit after secured creditors of $121 million.

When money owed to unsecured creditors is included, the book value deficit blows out to $195.5 million.Unsecured creditors are owed $55.7 million in interest payments, $11 million from subordinated notes and $1.46 million for unsecured deposits. Trade creditors are owed $526,000.

Strategic Finance was sent to the receivers in March by trustee Perpetual Trust, ending a moratorium arrangement that had been in place since December 2008. The finance company missed its milestone repayment on January 7 after it failed to generate enough loan recoveries.

« HBS members give SBS merger thumbs upRates Round Up »

Special Offers

Commenting is closed

 

print

Printable version  

print

Email to a friend
Today's Best Bank Rates
Rabobank 5.25  
Based on a $50,000 deposit
More Rates »
News Bites
Latest Comments
Subscribe Now

Deposit Rates newsletter

Previous News

MORE NEWS»

Most Commented On
About Us  |  Advertise  |  Contact Us  |  Terms & Conditions  |  Privacy Policy  |  RSS Feeds  |  Letters  |  Archive  |  Toolbox  |  Disclaimer
 
Site by Web Developer and eyelovedesign.com