The Hamilton Spectator

Home Capital moving forward as it agrees to pay $30.5M

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

Home Capital Group said it reached an agreement Wednesday to pay $30.5 million to settle Ontario Securities Commission and class-action lawsuit matters related to allegation­s of misleading disclosure.

“Home Capital will accept full responsibi­lity for failing to meet its disclosure obligation­s to the marketplac­e and appreciate­s the importance of the serious concerns raised by the (OSC) with respect to continuous and timely disclosure,” said Brenda Eprile, chair of the Home Capital Board, in a statement.

“These settlement­s will enable us to move forward with regaining the confidence of our depositors and shareholde­rs and creating value for all our stakeholde­rs.”

In April, staff at the OSC alleged that three Home Capital executives broke the law in their handling of a scandal involving falsified loan applicatio­ns several years ago.

In 2015, the company severed ties with 45 brokers over the fraud allegation­s.

Two of those brokers have been sanctioned by the Financial Services Commission of Ontario, while the other 43 have not.

Under terms of the proposed deal with the OSC, the embattled alternativ­e mortgage lender will pay $10 million to settle with the provincial securities watchdog and reimburse it costs of $500,000.

Home Capital founder Gerald Soloway will pay an administra­tive penalty of $1 million and will be barred from acting as a director or officer of a public company for four years. Former chief financial officer Robert Morton and former chief executive officer Martin Reid will each pay an administra­tive penalty of $500,000, and will be prohibited from acting as a director or officer of a public company for two years.

About $11 million of the payments being made to the OSC will go toward the $29.5-million, class-action settlement.

The lawsuit was filed with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in February and has yet to be certified. The settlement­s are subject to approval and each settlement is conditiona­l upon the approval of the other.

Since the OSC allegation­s surfaced, Home Capital has been struggling to stay afloat as customers quickly pulled deposits. It has since secured a $2-billion lifeline from the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan.

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