The Cairns Post

Slater boss, board go

Class action from rival law firm drags on

- MELISSA JENKINS

SLATER and Gordon boss Andrew Grech has quit and the board of the besieged law firm will be cleaned out under a debt restructur­ing deal that passes almost full ownership of the company to its lenders.

Lenders holding three quarters of Slater and Gordon’s debt, led by private equity firm Anchorage Capital, will own 95 per cent of its shares under the recapitali­sation deal.

After months of negotiatio­ns with lenders, the current board has unanimousl­y supported the deal that will oust them and have pledged to vote all shares they control in support of the new arrangemen­t.

The recapitali­sation deal is contingent on shareholde­r approval and the settlement of a class action brought by rival law firm Maurice Blackburn, representi­ng thousands of shareholde­rs.

Also among conditions for approval are an independen­t expert finding the law firm will remain solvent and that the deal is either “fair and reasonable” or “not fair but reasonable” to shareholde­rs.

“The recapitali­sation is intended to provide the company with a sustainabl­e level of senior secured debt and a stable platform for its future operations in both Australia and the UK,” the company told the Australian Securities Exchange.

The lenders will set up loan facilities worth $35 million, with some existing debt placed in a $30 million facility and a new $5 million facility establishe­d.

Existing shareholde­rs will control only 5 per cent of the company after the recapitali­sation, which will later be diluted to 4 per cent by the issue of new shares to lenders in the $5 million facility.

Managing director Mr Grech will remain on the board, with all directors to resign as new board members are appointed. Chief executive Hayden Stephens will continue to lead the company in Australia.

Slater and Gordon said it would continue mediation proceeding­s for the class action and provide an update in coming days. Maurice Blackburn brought the class action last October, representi­ng thousands of Slater shareholde­rs making claims over disclosure of financial informatio­n between March 2015 and February 2016.

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