Allied Farmers emerges as beneficiary of Property Ventures litigation
In 2013, the Hawera-based rural services firm sold various loans that it had written down to zero for $100,000, with the possibility of that rising to $500,000.
In 2013, the Hawera-based rural services firm sold various loans that it had written down to zero for $100,000, with the possibility of that rising to $500,000.
Allied Farmers says it could be in the money if litigation against former bankrupt Dave Henderson's Property Ventures group is successful.
In 2013, the Hawera-based rural services firm sold various loans that it had written down to zero for $100,000, with the possibility of that rising to $500,000. At the time, it declined to name the buyer or the outcomes that would trigger a top-up payment. Today, it said the deal was with a unit of litigation funder LPF Group, which is backing liquidator Robert Walker's suit against Property Ventures directors and auditor PwC.
"If the company's litigation is successful, ALF is entitled under the terms of the deed of assignment to a proportion of any net proceeds of that litigation (that proportion being confidential)," Allied chairman Garry Bluett said. "Highlighting the difficulties of predicting the outcome or the final quantum and the inherently risky nature of litigation, the liquidator has advised that, if successful, the final quantum will be higher than that predicted in 2013, and accordingly that ALF may be entitled to a substantially greater amount than $500,000."
The suit reached the Supreme Court last month, with Property Ventures' auditor PwC seeking to have the proceedings stayed until the court was satisfied it wasn't an abuse of process. The claim for between $240 million and $320 million made in 2014 was accruing a 20 percent interest compounding monthly, and PwC's counsel Bruce Gray QC told the Supreme Court it could top $1 billion by the time the trial starts next year.
Allied Farmers took on the loans in its ill-fated 2009 acquisition of the Hanover and United finance group's loan book that wasn't worth as much as initially thought. Allied Farmers has largely sold the residual assets of those loans and is focusing on its livestock business.
The shares rose 3.3 percent to 6.6 cents and have dropped 12 percent so far this year.
(BusinessDesk)