Teetering South Canterbury Finance, potentially facing
receivership next week, is understood to be stitching
together an 11th-hour deal with new equity partners this
weekend, but the deal could hinge on the Government taking a
$300 million or more stake in the company.
Sources have said the Treasury was briefed on Thursday about
taking an equity stake. The Cabinet is reported to be meeting
on Monday to discuss the issue.
If South Canterbury's recapitalisation is not resolved, its
receivership could throw the South Island's economy into
chaos because of the extent of South Canterbury loans.
Mr Hubbard's supporters have been pressuring the Cabinet to
withdraw statutory management so as to release interest
payments and capital to stricken investors.
Following the release of a critical report by statutory
managers yesterday on the unassociated businesses of South
Canterbury founder Allan Hubbard, South Canterbury went into
a trading halt on the stock exchange, with market
expectations a new equity partner was about to be announced.
However, no announcement was made.
Critically, South Canterbury has a waiver from its trustees
until Tuesday to operate outside covenants of how much cash
it must carry, having been seeking a new equity party since
June.
Failure to adhere to trustee requirements - and needing a
major cash injection estimated to be at least $400 million -
could see it placed in receivership on Tuesday.
If the Government were to pick up the $954 million provision
it has of the entire $1.7 billion exposure it guaranteed
after receivership, it could adversely affect its sovereign
rating by Standard and Poors and Moody's.
A source close to the company yesterday said two potential
equity partners were negotiating to buy almost $1 billion of
its loan book, but the Government had to step in and take a
stake.
There was a possibility the Government was being asked to
take over part or all of the "bad bank" South Canterbury
loans, as opposed to more secure "good bank" loans, two of
three divisions South Canterbury has recently restructured
itself into.
Craigs Investment Partners broker Peter McIntyre said months
of rumour and conjecture "were coming down to the wire" and
the Government would see it now had a role to play, as
opposed to standing by and watching investors in South
Canterbury lose much of their investments.
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