The biggest shareholders of SeaDragon have agreed to provide a short-term bridging loan of $1 million to allow the unprofitable fish oil refiner to continue to operate while it tries to negotiate longer-term funding.
Cornerstone shareholders – BioScience Managers, an Australian investment firm, and Pescado Holdings, which is associated with Christchurch's rich-lister Stewart family - agreed to the "short-term bridge facility" to ensure the company can meet its cash requirements through until June 30. The loan, which is to be repaid on June 15, is at an annual interest rate of 12 percent, to be paid monthly, and is secured by a second-ranking security interest over SeaDragon's assets behind an existing security interest held by Comvita.
SeaDragon narrowed its first-half loss to $2.7 million from a loss of $3.5 million a year earlier, while sales halved to $1.5 million, which the company said reflected its transition to Omega-3 fish oils from its "legacy" Omega-2 products. It had $2.29 million of cash on hand as at Sept. 30, it said in November when it drew down the remaining $1 million of a $3 million convertible loan facility with Comvita.
But it has continued to sail close to the wind. In May, the company said it would have an estimated cash shortfall of about $175,000 as of May 30. It forecast a normalised ebitda loss of $4.1 million to $4.4 million for the year ended March 31, down from a loss of $4.7 million a year earlier.
Today the company said it remains in talks with BioScience, Pescado and Comvita "with respect to medium- to longer-term funding" and continues to consider how other existing shareholders could participate in raising capital "including potentially through a follow-on renounceable pro-rata rights offer, which will further support the company's longer-term capital requirements."