Weldon denies keeping NZX board in dark of Clear, says he lost trust in vendors
Former NZX chief Mark Weldon has denied he kept material information from his board before the Clear Grain Exchange acquisition.
Former NZX chief Mark Weldon has denied he kept material information from his board before the Clear Grain Exchange acquisition.
Former NZX chief Mark Weldon has denied he kept material information from his board before the Clear Grain Exchange acquisition and says he stopped trusting the vendors when it became clear they had misrepresented the likelihood of winning Graincorp, Australia's largest bulk grain handler, as a customer.
Mr Weldon made the comments during his second day of cross-examination by Tim North, counsel for Clear's former owners, Grant Thomas and Dominic Pym, and their companies Ralec Commodities and Ralec Interactive.
NZX and Ralec have made claim and counterclaim over NZX's purchase of the grain exchange in 2009 in a High Court hearing that's been extended to 11 weeks because of slow progress.
Today, Mr North quizzed Mr Weldon about analysis he had commissioned about Clear from Richard Koch, managing director of Australian agricultural news business ProFarmer, which NZX acquired in 2008.
Mr Koch had advised that Clear was five to 10 years away from making money, an assessment Mr North says was kept from the NZX board.
But Mr Weldon says Mr Koch was actually predicting how long it would take for Clear to be taken up en masse by growers, which would amount to over 50% of growers trading grain through the platform, and that was not key for Clear's success in a market he described as "heavily institutionalised."
The NZX board would expect management to synthesise the views it had gathered and Mr Koch didn't amount to an expert, Mr Weldon says.
"Koch had absolutely no experience in grain markets," Mr Weldon says. "It would be like saying a really good analyst for Fletcher Building would be able to tell if NZX would make money. His views would hardly constitute him as an expert."
Tetchy cross-examination
The cross-examination became at times tetchy and Justice Robert Dobson had to intervene several times today to clarify what was being asked, as Mr Weldon appeared increasingly frustrated at Mr North's approach, at one point saying: "I've answered yes to this inane question a number of times."
In his brief, Mr Weldon said Ralec had misled NZX over the nature of the platform's relationship with Graincorp and NZX would not have bought the platform had it not thought Graincorp would trade grain through the platform.
Today, Mr Weldon said it was astonishing Graincorp's trading on the market had not eventuated. Mr Weldon had replaced Ralec's Mr Thomas, who left Clear in 2010, with NZX's corporate counsel Rachael Newsome when NZX lost trust in the transparency of information coming from the grain exchange.
"Could we go and talk to Graincorp? Yes we could, but we had no reason to – we trusted and believed [Thomas] and when we got some suspicions that something was rotten in the state of Denmark we sent Rachael Newsome across. I wanted someone who I could trust, who wouldn't gild the lily. That was when we understood there had never been a commitment to trade, even pre-acquisition."
Mr Weldon was pushed by both Mr North and Justice Dobson on whether there was anything preventing NZX from talking to Graincorp itself pre-acquisition.
Mr Weldon said NZX felt an unshakeable belief Graincorp would trade on Clear because of the information it had been given by Clear, and that confidentiality about the acquisition was an issue.
"My strong sense was the Clear guys didn't want us talking to anybody, they didn't want wind of the acquisition getting out," he said, adding when asked by Mr North that he believed Graincorp had an opportunity to match any offer for Clear.
Mr North put it to Mr Weldon that NZX had "never spent anywhere near $12 million" on Clear but Mr Weldon said, as a "back of the envelope" calculation, NZX might have spent about $15-20 million on the Clear business from the point of acquisition to when the market operator first issued proceedings, and he had been told the accumulated losses were around $8 million.
Hearing extended
Justice Dobson told the counsel for the parties that another two weeks was available for the hearing if needed and if that wasn't enough time the court would have to sit for longer hours.
He agreed to extend the hearing after lawyers for both sides told the court yesterday that their witnesses wouldn't be finished within the initial nine-week time frame.
The judge yesterday warned Mr North about spending too much time on similar questions or a single document, and this morning directed him to take it as given that Mr Weldon had read emails he had been sent after Mr Weldon gave the same response, that he assumed he had read the email but could not remember it specifically as it was seven years ago, to multiple questions.
Mr Weldon is the fourth witness in the case. NZX and Ralec have made claim and counterclaim over NZX's purchase of the Australian Clear Grain Exchange in 2009.
NZX is suing for between A$20.7 million and A$37.6 million, and Ralec has countered with a suit totalling A$14 million plus bonuses.
NZX claims Clear's former owners, Grant Thomas and Dominic Pym, and their companies Ralec Commodities and Ralec Interactive misled NZX when it bought the commodities trading platform with "wildly inaccurate" forecasts.
Ralec subsequently filed a counterclaim against NZX, later adding Mr Weldon to the list of defendants. Ralec claims NZX, which bought the platform for A$7 million with the potential for a further A$7 million of earnouts, failed to fund the exchange sufficiently. The case pre-dates much of NZX's existing management, having first hit the courts in 2011.
(BusinessDesk)