Gary Romano resigns local directorships with Pengxin
Gary Romano ceased his directorships with Pengxin's local units over November and December last year.
Gary Romano ceased his directorships with Pengxin's local units over November and December last year.
Gary Romano, the face of Chinese group Shanghai Pengxin in New Zealand, has resigned his local directorships with the dairy investor after its bid to buy Lochinver Station was knocked back by the government.
Mr Romano ceased his directorships with Pengxin's local units over November and December last year, according to Companies Office records. Mr Romano is overseas on holiday and couldn't immediately be contacted for comment. A local spokeswoman said while there had been some changes, she wasn't sure of the detail and no announcement had been made.
The government scuttled Pengxin's $88 million proposed purchase of Lochinver in September last year, saying the transaction failed the test of providing a substantial benefit to New Zealand. The decision ended a long wait for the diversified investor, owned by Chinese billionaire Jiang Zhaobai, which had agreed to buy the 13,843ha farm near Lake Taupo from concrete, quarrying and engineering firm Stevenson Group in 2014.
Lochinver was sold in November to New Zealand farming group Rimanui Farms, and Pengxin withdrew from buying the neighbouring Taharua Farm, and a separate deal to buy the so-called "Pinny" farms in Northland.
Pengxin came to prominence in New Zealand with the 2012 acquisition of the 16 Crafar dairy farms, part of New Zealand's largest family-owned dairy business which had been put into receivership. The Chinese company's local website notes the "challenging" purchase of those farms, following two years of controversy over the land ownership. The purchase was met with widespread opposition as political parties put pressure on the government over the sale of large tracts of farm land to foreign interests, particularly Chinese. Pengxin also owns 74% of South Island dairy farmer Synlait Farms, which supplies processor Synlait Milk.
Before joining the Chinese group, Mr Romano headed Fonterra Cooperative Group's local milk unit but resigned the position after the milk botulism scare in 2013.
(BusinessDesk)