The Gold Coast Bulletin

Spirit riddle intensifie­s

- KATHLEEN SKENE BUSINESS EDITOR FNT TO THE MARKET

GOLD Coast firm Hickey Management is no longer project manager for the $1.3 billion Spirit tower.

The future of the Gold Coast’s tallest building has been under a cloud, with no sign of tenders for the constructi­on being put to market as a financial squeeze in China places pressure on parent company Forise.

Sales in the 479-unit tower, which would boast a $41 million penthouse, had been strong since they were launched in a VIP-studded Palazzo Versace launch in July.

The developers have already spent an estimated $120 million on the developmen­t, with Sydney financier MaxCap purportedl­y providing funding for the project.

Multiple attempts to contact Sydney-based Forise Investment­s Australia directly over the past two weeks have been unsuccessf­ul.

Hickey Management chairman Tony Hickey declined to detail the nature of his ongoing relationsh­ip with Forise, but company documents show he remains a director for Perth-based, ASXlisted mining exploratio­n company Frontier Resources (FNT), which Forise took a majority share in this year.

Shares in Frontier Resources were placed in a trading halt after the Gold Coast Bulletin reported entities connected with Forise had taken a $6 million, 67 per cent stake as the ASX issued the company with a please-explain over its future operations.

Another entity linked to Forise, ACH Investment­s, bought an additional 9.58 per cent slice same day.

The stock exchange queried speculatio­n over a “change of activities” for the mining explorer, whose website last month listed a number of African mining projects, but those projects have since been removed from the site. “FNT confirms its main business activity remains of Frontier the mineral and resource exploratio­n in Papua New Guinea,” their response to the market said.

“FNT’s proposal to use the funds raised under the placement agreement with Forise to fund further exploratio­n work at its projects in Papua New Guinea is unchanged.”

Frontier said “there is currently no proposal, negotiatio­n or change in business strategy” and that if one arose it would be put to the ASX for considerat­ion.

Forise Investment Australia, is one of a web of companies linked to Chinese mega-company Fu Hua.

Chinese-backed projects around the world have been impacted by a clampdown on foreign investment by the Chinese Government, which intensifie­d last month when it passed laws classifyin­g foreign property developmen­t investment as “restricted”.

Exacerbati­ng the squeeze is a devastatin­g crash of China’s peer-to-peer or “P2P” lending system, which has seen thousands of companies collapse and individual­s lose their savings in a failed system that holds up to $AU300 billion in outstandin­g loans.

The Gold Coast Bulletin understand­s Fu Hua has lost as much as $400 million in the P2P collapse.

FNT CONFIRMS ITS MAIN BUSINESS ACTIVITY REMAINS MINERAL AND RESOURCE EXPLORATIO­N IN PAPUA NEW GUINEA

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 ?? Picture: REGINA KING ?? Tony Hickey has declined to detail the nature of his ongoing relationsh­ip with Forise.
Picture: REGINA KING Tony Hickey has declined to detail the nature of his ongoing relationsh­ip with Forise.

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