Saskatoon StarPhoenix

‘IT’S TOO EARLY TO DECLARE VICTORY’

Home Capital emphasizes confidence in more stable future, defends Buffett deal

- ARMINA LIGAYA

Home Capital Group Inc.’s leaders faced sharp questions about the company’s future on Thursday, as shareholde­rs pressed them on a range of issues including the dilutive impact of a white-knight deal with renowned investor Warren Buffett and the $210-million loss the company said it expects to post for the latest quarter.

The company’s directors and senior executives, however, used the company’s annual general meeting in Toronto to defend the Buffett deal and emphasize their “confidence” in Home Capital’s viability, months after allegation­s of misleading disclosure, executive departures and a partial run on its funding pushed it to the brink.

“It is too early to declare victory,” board member Alan Hibben told shareholde­rs. “However, we have accomplish­ed a lot and look forward to a more stable and profitable future.”

Hibben said the Buffett deal — which in total could see a subsidiary of Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway invest up to $400 million for a 38.39 per cent stake in Torontobas­ed Home Capital while providing a new, cheaper $2-billion credit facility — has been “positive for us, positive for shareholde­rs.”

While the first phase of the deal won approval from the Toronto Stock Exchange on Thursday, one shareholde­r expressed concern about the “huge dilutive effect” of the second tranche of that deal, in which Buffett will acquire nearly 24 million of shares at roughly $10.30 per share.

“Shareholde­rs will have to defeat this ... if they can,” the shareholde­r said.

A special meeting is scheduled for September to vote on the second portion. Since the arrangemen­t with Buffett was announced, shares have jumped from $14.94 to roughly $17.

Hibben said having Buffett as a bigger-stake sponsor is key for “when it hits the fan the next time.” There was likely no room to negotiate on the price of Buffett’s additional investment, but Buffett “has nothing to say” if shareholde­rs vote against it, he added.

“It might be nice for us to think things could be better, but I think the answer is really a binary one,” Hibben said. “You either like the fact that you have a 38 per cent shareholde­r from Berkshire Hathaway, or you like fact that there is a 19.99 per cent of a shareholdi­ng by Berkshire Hathaway. But it’s in your hands.”

Ahead of the meeting, Home Capital also quantified the financial hit it took in the latest quarter, when it grappled with a liquidity crisis after depositors withdrew hundred of millions from its subsidiary’s deposit balances. The company said in a statement early Thursday it expects to record a loss after its expenses increased by $175 million for the quarter ending June 30. That includes a $100 million commitment fee related to the a $2-billion emergency credit line it secured in May from the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan as a backstop.

Hibben said the new $2-billion credit facility with Berkshire Hathaway has a one per cent standby fee on undrawn funds, allowing Home Capital to pay a pre-tax standby annual fee of $20 million, down from $50 million at 2.5 per cent with HOOPP.

On top of the previously announced deal to sell $1.2 billion worth of commercial mortgages to KingSett Capital, Home Capital has a “number of sale and financing transactio­ns underway that could be executed over the course of the next month or so” that will go toward paying down the $1.65 billion it has drawn, Hibben added.

The goal is to reduce the amount drawn on the credit facility to zero, which would make the nine per cent interest rate on the Berkshire loan “moot,” he added.

“We intend to use the credit facility as a pure backstop,” he said.

Home Capital’s board did have “extraordin­arily slow and cumbersome” discussion­s with Canadian banks for a credit facility, but their offers were not “competitiv­e,” said Hibben.

Now, the company’s plan is to “slow the shrinkage of the balance sheet and eventually return to a path of mortgage growth,” he added.

We have accomplish­ed a lot and look forward to a more stable and profitable future.

 ??  ?? Home Capital board member Alan Hibben, left, sits with Bonita Then, interim president and CEO of the alternativ­e mortgage lender, at its annual general meeting in Toronto on Thursday. Hibben said the company plans to “eventually return to a path of...
Home Capital board member Alan Hibben, left, sits with Bonita Then, interim president and CEO of the alternativ­e mortgage lender, at its annual general meeting in Toronto on Thursday. Hibben said the company plans to “eventually return to a path of...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada