A Timaru High Court hearing set for May on whether Aorangi Securities or the Hubbards own $60 million of disputed assets is key to whether investors in the failed group get most of their money back or only a third of the funds, the statutory managers say.
The Aorangi investors have so far received 15 cents in the dollar, or $14.5 million of the $96 million owed.
If the High Court rules the 'introduced assets' belong to Aorangi, the investors could get "almost all of their investment capital back." If Jean Hubbard wins, the total payout may be 35 cents in the dollar, or $34 million, statutory managers Richard Simpson, Trevor Thornton and Graeme McGlinn of Grant Thornton say in their 13th report.
The introduced assets were shares and loans in farm owning companies, partnerships and commercial entities introduced to Aorangi by the late businessman Allan Hubbard and wife Jean between April 2009 and March 2010. Jean Hubbard claims the assets belong to her and her husband's estate.
As a result of the pending court hearing, funds from the sale of any introduced assets are being held in escrow pending the outcome.