Businesses in the failed Auckland-headquartered townhouse/apartment developer Du Val group owe an estimated $237.6 million, according to a new report by the Cabinet-appointed statutory managers PwC.
In a summary of estimated external obligations by the businesses headed by Charlotte and Kenyon Clarke as at August 31, PwC today detailed:
First-ranking secured creditors owed $170.7m;
Investors owed $41.2m;
Unsecured creditors owed $18m;
Preferential creditors owed $7.5m, including employees and Inland Revenue.
That takes total estimated external obligations to $236,607,000, according to the summary.
When it was appointed, it gave notice to parties with a registered security interest. It issued requests for information to the group’s advisers and sought all records and books for financial information.
It gave notice to all banks and other third parties and advertised its appointment.
It talked to secured lenders, briefed staff, arranged insurance and got security on building sites to ensure trading could be continued.
Du Val had many activities including property development, development funding, selling property, taking funds to invest, portfolio management and facilities management for larger developments or landlords.
On August 21, Cabinet moved on Du Val Group, taking the rare step of placing it in statutory management.
The move follows the group of companies being placed in interim receivership on August 2 after an application by the Financial Markets Authority (FMA) and police entering the Remuera home of the Clarkes.
Asset preservation orders were issued and interim receivership orders were also made directly against the Clarkes.
Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Andrew Bayly said Du Val Group had recently gone into interim receivership, leaving significant liabilities.
“The situation is complex and of such a scale that immediate intervention is required to prevent broader harm,” Bayly said last month.
Anne Gibson has been the Herald’s property editor for 24 years, written books and covered property extensively here and overseas.