Toronto Star

HOME CAPITAL SALE

Struggling mortgage lender secures $2-billion loan from health-care pension plan,

- SCOTT DEVEAU, ALLISON MCNEELY AND DOUG ALEXANDER BLOOMBERG

Home Capital Group Inc. hired bankers for a possible sale after the Canadian mortgage lender secured a $2-billion loan from the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan to stem a run on deposits following a regulatory probe.

Home Capital didn’t identify the lender in a statement Thursday, though people familiar with the process said the health-care workers pension fund is backing the loan. The Toronto-based lender hired RBC Capital Markets and BMO Capital Markets to advise on “strategic options” after it secured the one-year loan, according to the statement.

A Home Capital sale could be the next step for the struggling mortgage lender facing allegation­s by Ontario’s securities regulator that it misled investors on disclosure­s tied to an internal probe that found 45 outside brokers falsified income informatio­n on mortgage applicatio­ns.

High-interest deposits have fallen over the past four weeks, making it harder for Home Capital to fund its mortgages.

A sale becomes more likely if the firm can’t raise guaranteed investment securities deposits, GMP Securities analyst Stephen Boland said earlier in a note.

“We believe HCG’s ability to raise GIC deposits and maintain operations is uncertain,” Boland said in the note before Home Capital’s statement Thursday.

“Unless GIC costs stabilize, a runoff scenario or sale is a growing possibilit­y.”

The Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan (HOOPP) is a Toronto-based plan, which represents more than 321,000 health-care workers in Ontario, with assets of about $70 billion.

HOOPP president and chief executive officer Jim Keohane sits on Home Capital’s board and is a shareholde­r of the mortgage lender.

Home Capital’s external spokespers­on Boyd Erman declined to comment. Representa­tives for HOOPP and Keohane didn’t return calls seeking comment.

Richard Leblanc, a law professor at York University, said the loan appears to represent a conflict for Keohane given his two roles.

“It’s a conflict, absolutely,” Leblanc said from Toronto. “An independen­t director should not have any commercial relationsh­ip with the entity at all. I mean, he can loan the money, but he should resign from the board.”

The one-year credit line from HOOPP has a 10-per-cent interest rate on outstandin­g balances and a 2.5-per-cent rate on undrawn amounts.

Home Capital is also required to make an initial $1-billion draw and pay a non-refundable commitment fee of $100 million. The loan is secured by a pool of mortgages originated by Home Trust, the company’s mortgage originatio­n subsidiary.

 ??  ?? HOOPP president and CEO Jim Keohane is a shareholde­r of Home Capital and also sits on its board.
HOOPP president and CEO Jim Keohane is a shareholde­r of Home Capital and also sits on its board.

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