A New South Wales-based mining investor, Mach Energy, is expected to make an alternative bid for distressed state-owned coal miner Solid Energy at today's 'watershed' meeting of creditors in Christchurch this morning.
BusinessDesk reliably understands Mach will seek a 30 day delay to the vote scheduled at today's meeting of Solid Energy creditors, allowing time to undertake due diligence and make an alternative offer to the one put together by the voluntary administrators, Korda Mentha, and the Solid Energy board.
It is understood the Mach bid would offer employees and trade creditors the same certainty of full payment as the Korda Mentha plan and would seek to buy out bank and non-trade creditors immediately, rather than offering a payment at the end of Korda Mentha's proposed 2 1/2-year asset realisation programme.
Little is known about Mach, which was registered with the Australian Securities and Investment Commission in October last year. Its website is under construction and publicly available ASIC records give no clue to its ownership, although its backers are understood to be Asian investors looking for opportunities in the coal sector created by the global slump in coal prices that have forced Solid Energy into administration for break-up.
Korda Mentha's proposed Deed of Company Arrangement was unveiled on Sept. 10. At that time it had the support of a wide range of banks, local authorities and creditors including KiwiRail and Fonterra, based on its potential to return between 35 cents and 40 cents in the dollar following an orderly asset realisation process, for which the banks would extend a two and a half year moratorium on debt repayments.