Northern Crest Investments, the last surviving business of Mark Bryers' failed Blue Chip group, fell into the red this year after writing off a deal that soured in April.
The Sydney-based company, which recently applied to remove itself from the New Zealand Companies Office registry, made a loss of $3 million in the six months ended September 30, compared to a loss of $11,000 a year earlier, according to the company's first-half report.
Most of that came from a $3.5 million write-down in fees that had previously been charged to Columbus Property Marketing Pty, a company that was to oversee the bulk of its residential investment property distribution activity, and has been replaced by Rutherford Franchising Pty.
In a note entitled 'fundamental error', the company said it should've disclosed the April 1 transaction as a subsequent event in last year's annual report when it posted a $3.7 million profit.
Last month it called in the liquidators for subsidiary Maine Sheldon Holdings Pty, the unit involved in the failed deal.
Northern Crest, which has shifted its focus to selling licences for its intellectual property, is struggling to keep cash-flow positive after its operation spent more than it earned.
It had a short-fall in working capital of $7.8 million as at September 30.
The directors defended its going concern status, and are planning a rights issue that will swap $4.8 million of debt for equity once its suspension on the Australian Stock Exchange is lifted.
"The company is also in discussion with a major bank to raise additional capital to fund the development of its operations going forward," the company said in a note entitled 'going concern'.
"Whilst the company is meeting its current commitments as they fall due, it also has entered into arrangements with past unsecured creditors to meet those commitments on agreed timeframes."
Northern Crest, formerly known as Blue Chip Financial Solutions, kept its listing on the Australian Stock Exchange after delisting from the NZX in 2006.
It was suspended from trading in Australia in February 2008 after failing to pay its listing fees.
The shares last traded at 9 Australian cents.
The company twice avoided liquidation last year, the first time in June when the High Court in Auckland decided the firm's new board, which sidelined Bryers, would have a better chance of trading out of cash deficit, easing the pressure on the liquidators of the rest of the group.
The second time, it managed to convince Robt Jones Holdings to give it more time to repay debt.
Bryers stepped down from the board of Northern Crest in May last year, though he was paid $113,000 in consultancy fees in the latest year.
The Serious Fraud Office dropped a fraud investigation into Byers' dealings in Bluechip while saying the firm may have operated in a "moral vacuum."
He escaped a prison sentence earlier this year when he pleaded guilty to 34 charges relating to the company's mismanagement and improper accounting, angering more than 2,000 investors owed some $84 million who saw his punishment of a $33,750 fine and 75 hours' community work as inadequate.
Northern Crest posts $3m loss
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