Monday, May 28, 2012

Ground hog day...



Construction firm Hastie Group and 44 of its subsidiaries have been placed in voluntary administration, leaving thousands of jobs at risk after the business discovered "accounting irregularities" worth as much as $20 million.

But this is only the latest development in a string of bad announcements for the company, which has seen its shares tumble by 93% during the past year – it has been attempting to recapitalise itself for months.
Hastie last traded at just 16 cents, down from as high as $2.45 at this time last year. Industry unions are already riled by the announcement, which has left thousands of employees without work. The business has 7,000 employees overall, with 4,000 in Australia.

Ian Carson, David McEvoy and Craig Crosbie of PPB Advisory were appointed as administrators after the company announced the accounting irregularities last week.

In a statement, Carson said the move is a disappointment, but there was no other option "given the extreme financial situation".
"We are obliged to confirm Hastie Group's ability to fund trading before we can resume business. We need time to assess the details of the situation and to determine the viability of the ongoing businesses.
"In the meantime, we remain acutely aware of Hastie Group's role on major construction projects and are assessing those urgently. We will provide an update to employees and other affected parties as soon as possible."
All New Zealand businesses will continue to operate as normal, although receivers and managers have been appointed to one company there.
This comes after the company announced it had found "irregularities" in its finances – as high as $20 million.
"These irregularities date from the financial year 2009 and appear to have resulted from the deliberate actions of a current employee (on suspension)," the company said last week.
Accounting irregularities totalling $3 million were discovered during the audit process for the first half of the year and were taken as a net loss. But "fresh information" prompted a new investigation.
PPB was contacted this morning, but no reply was available prior to publication.
The collapse comes during what has been one of the worst years in recent history for the construction market, with record numbers of insolvencies, while fraud has also been on the rise fuelled by global economic turmoil.
This is the latest development in a line of bad news for the company.
Earlier this month, Hastie's shares were suspended due to a "review event" prompted by the company's banking syndicate. The review event was set aside, but Hastie was still in negotiations over financing – it submitted two proposals on May 18 and gave no further update.
In its latest financial report, for the half-year ending December 31 2011, the company recorded a net loss before tax of $159 million up from a loss of $95 million during the previous corresponding period.
The result led to the company breaking some of its banking covenants, which caused debt repayments to be accelerated.
And yet Hastie had even more problems last month surrounding a dispute in the Middle East with Dutco Balfour Beatty over a building project. DBB wanted to terminate the company's contract and called for payment of performance bank guarantees worth $6.2 million.
A second update on May 3 said DBB had been paid $7.4 million under the bank guarantees.
As a result of all of this, Hastie said anticipated EBIT for the second half of the year would be "reduced to approximately $0".
Non-executive directors Lindsay Phillips and Harry Boon resigned from their positions last week.

Source: http://www.smartcompany.com.au/construction-and-engineering/049909-how-a-20-million-fraud-took-down-construction-firm-hastie-group.html



And in other news:

St Hilliers Construction founder Tim Casey says the firm is owed more than $6 million by the NSW government and has slammed its decision to take over 13 NSW social housing projects.
Speaking at a creditors' meeting in Sydney on Friday, Casey said he had written to the State Treasurer, Premier and Finance Minister over the $8.1 million in work St Hilliers has undertaken on the projects.
Casey claims the construction business has only been paid $1.4 million.
Of the $6.7 million still owed, $3.5 million is owed to sub-contractors of St Hilliers Construction.
Casey says St Hilliers plans to sell the company’s Cumberland Street headquarters in Sydney, worth up to $22 million, to pump money into the ailing construction business.
“It’s a high-handed decision of the state government to [terminate these state housing contracts],” Casey said at the creditors' meeting.
One contractor on the NSW housing projects, Ivan Stefanac, a gyprocker who is owed $41,000, told The Australian he does not expect to receive any money now that the government has taken over the projects.
At the meeting Casey said all but two of the projects would be reopened and said he was confident the construction business would find a way to start trading again.
There are about 1,000 creditors of St Hilliers Construction.
At the meeting, attended by about 100 creditors, administrators Trent Hancock and Michael Hird of Moore Stephens Sydney Corporate Recovery Group did not say how much was owed to creditors.
The St Hilliers website is functioning normally again after previously only linking through to a press release about the voluntary administration decision.
Separately, the Reed Group, which is facing the threat of supplier seeking to wind up the business, has had its claim that it is owed up to $70 million by the NSW state government rejected following a parliamentary hearing.
An independent expert panel chaired by Andrew Rogers QC found that the monies Reed claims it is owed by the state government were not “anywhere near” the true figure.
Reed claims the money is owed for work done on building roads and building schools as part of the federal government’s $16.2 billion Building the Education Revolution scheme.

Source:http://www.propertyobserver.com.au/news/st-hilliers-founder-says-government-owes-it-millions-but-reed-group-government-claim-rejected/2012052854859


Till next time...

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