Mercury (Hobart)

$250k shares now worthless

Tassie link to collapsed e-retailer

- ALEX TREACY

A COLLAPSED whitegoods eretailer owned by two Tasmanian directors blew $250,000 of company money investing in shares in an esoteric fintech start-up that are currently worthless, according to a liquidator’s report filed with the corporate regulator.

Steel & Water Pty Ltd traded as Home Appliances Plus until a slew of negative publicity, including an appearance on Channel 9’s A Current Affair and investigat­ion by most consumer watchdogs in Australia, led to its shutdown.

The two directors, Richard Douglas Edwards, 41, of Launceston, and Devonport man Ashley James Fabics, 45, who is understood to now live in Melbourne, tipped the ailing company into liquidatio­n on October 10 last year. In a report filed with ASIC, liquidator Matthew Bookless, of Gold Coast firm SV Partners, revised down to $1,335,516.22 the company’s estimated debt, though “not all creditors have submitted a proof of debt” yet. The directors estimated in a previous report to ASIC their company owed as much as $1,897,735. The $1.335m debt is balanced against $67,859.85 cash held in trust by the duo’s law firm.

Mr Bookless said in his report he believed their company was insolvent from June 30, 2022 – four months before he was appointed. While directors can be liable for company expenses incurred after the estimated date of insolvency, Mr Bookless said he did not intend to pursue that course.

“Based on the informatio­n currently known, I do not believe the directors have any defence available to avoid personal liability of a potential insolvent trading claim,” he said. “(However) my preliminar­y investigat­ions indicate the directors do not own sufficient assets with which to meet an insolvent trading action.”

Mr Bookless continues to investigat­e whether the company made unfair preference payments or uncommerci­al transactio­ns, which he has the power to reverse.

The report notes that Mr Edwards and Mr Fabics’ company spent $49,861.50 on a deposit on property in Victoria and also invested more than $301,200 in shares, including $250,000 blown on an unlisted fintech start-up, Divvera Pty Ld, that are currently worthless. This is because, according to accounts given to Mr Bookless, Divvera is locked in a nasty dispute with its thirdparty software developer.

Divvera’s director alleged to Mr Bookless that the software developer “misappropr­iated Divvera’s product”. “The director has advised, given the alleged misappropr­iation, the company’s shares in Divvera hold no value,” he said.

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