The Niagara Falls Review

Home Capital inks deal to sell $1.2B of mortgage assets to KingSett Capital

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ALEXANDRA POSADZKI

THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Home Capital Group is selling $1.2 billion in mortgage assets to KingSett Capital, a private equity firm focused on real estate, as it looks to regain its financial footing following a flood of customer withdrawal­s from their savings accounts.

The deal will allow Home Capital to reduce its debt, after taking on an emergency $2-billion line of credit on costly terms from the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan.

The alternativ­e mortgage lender says it expects to lose approximat­ely $15 million on the transactio­n with KingSett.

Home Capital says KingSett will buy the portfolio for 99.61 per cent of its outstandin­g principal value, less a share of future credit losses.

The company will initially receive 97 per cent of the outstandin­g principal value of the mortgages. The remainder will be subject to any credit losses in the portfolio.

“This transactio­n will help the company further stabilize its liquidity position and highlights the flexibilit­y and options created by the quality of our assets,” Bonita Then, Home Capital’s interim president and CEO, said in a statement Tuesday.

Shares of Home Capital were up 4.19 per cent, or 62 cents, to $15.41 in afternoon trading on the Toronto stock market Tuesday.

Veritas analyst Mike Rizvanovic says the deal is a positive for the company’s earnings, as it allows Home Capital to pay down the majority of its debt with HOOP.

“That was just done at such a ridiculous­ly high interest rate that it just really eroded their earnings power,” Rizvanovic said.

But the deposit issues continue to plague the company, Rizvanovic added. The company offers triple the interest rates on one-year GICs compared to some of the banks, but it still hasn’t been able to regain full access to that source of funding, he said.

Rizvanovic said he’d like to see several days or weeks in a row where the company has inflows rather than outflows to its deposit base.

“That to me would be the beginning of greener pastures for this company,” he said.

“It’s probably just going to take time for people to stop associatin­g Home Capital with all that negativity.”

Home Capital has been in a cash crunch since April when customers started withdrawin­g their savings, which the company uses to fund its mortgage lending, following allegation­s by the Ontario Securities Commission.

The securities watchdog had accused the company of misleading investors in its disclosure­s surroundin­g a scandal involving falsified loan applicatio­ns.

Last week, Home Capital agreed to settle both the OSC matter and a class-action lawsuit filed by investors.

The agreements are subject to OSC and court approval and conditiona­l upon the approval of the other.

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 ?? POSTMEDIA NETWORK FILES ?? The Toronto offices of Home Capital Group in Toronto.
POSTMEDIA NETWORK FILES The Toronto offices of Home Capital Group in Toronto.

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