The New Zealand Herald

Halifax hell

Long after the collapse of an online brokerage, investors are still wondering when they will see their money, writes Tamsyn Parker

-

Nearly two years after Halifax Investment Services went into administra­tion, thousands of investors are still waiting to see how much of their money they will get back.

It was on November 23, 2018 that partners at insolvency specialist Ferrier Hodgson were appointed administra­tors of Australia’s Halifax Investment Services in Sydney. Four days later on November 27, the appointmen­t was extended to Halifax NZ, 70 per cent owned by Halifax Australia.

About 12,000 investors have been caught up in the collapse of the online brokerage, with some A$211 million ($223m) invested. Just over 2000 of the investors are based in New Zealand.

The company’s services included margin foreign exchange trading, CFDs (contracts for difference, a form of speculatin­g on market moves), and shares and options trading through the online platforms Interactiv­e Brokers, MetaTrader­4 and MetaTrader­5.

All of the New Zealand arm’s administra­tion and treasury support services were provided by the Australian head office. So, when the Australian business went into administra­tion, Halifax NZ could not operate separately.

The initial administra­tors’ report found that while investors’ money was held in trust, there was a shortfall of A$19.7m — about 9 per cent of clients’ equity positions.

By August this year that shortfall had blown out to A$33.15m — about 13 per cent of client equity — due to investor account balances rising in value and the cost of the liquidatio­n.

Investigat­ions found that money from both New Zealand and Australian investors was co-mingled and used

to fund operationa­l losses. They

The liquidator­s do not anticipate that a distributi­on to all investors will be made prior to June 2021 and the distributi­on may not be complete until after that time.

found that the only way forward was to recommend the appointmen­t of liquidator­s.

On March 22, 2019, the same administra­tors were appointed as liquidator­s, after creditors resolved to take that move at a watershed meeting.

Liquidator­s Morgan Kelly and Philip Quinlan of KPMG (which Ferrier Hodgson had merged into) said the mixing of funds meant they could not figure out how much of the money held in trust should go to which investors.

Instead, they created four classes of investor to help work out how to dish out the funds, and applied to the Federal Court of Australia and the High Court of New Zealand to get a decision on how to divvy up the money.

Five representa­tive defendants have been appointed to represent various issues and two related parties have also joined the proceeding­s to represent their own interests.

Since then the case has been winding its way through the courts, with dual hearings held on both sides of the Tasman.

A final hearing is now set down for two weeks, starting on November 30.

Even then, the liquidator­s have told investors not to expect any money until after June next year.

“Due to the time required to verify investor claims and apply the directions and orders made by the courts to these claims and distribute available assets, we estimate that following receipt of final court directions and orders after the hearing of all issues, it will take at least six months to make a distributi­on,” the liquidator­s say.

“The liquidator­s do not anticipate that a distributi­on to all investors will be made prior to June 2021 and the distributi­on may not be complete until after that time.”

One New Zealand investor who had $45,000 invested via both the New Zealand and Australian platforms says the wait is frustratin­g, but there is little he can do. “That is the law, it’s our legal system.”

He won’t be attending the court case and for now he has just put the situation out of his head. “It’s just waiting and more waiting,” he says.

Legal action

The liquidator­s are also looking at ways to recover the rest of the money, but have noted that they must also consider the cost of chasing the cash.

Funding any recovery action could involve the investors and creditors having to put up more money, or the involvemen­t of a litigation funder, which would typically take a chunk of any money that might be recovered.

“We are in discussion with multiple litigation funders,” says the liquidator­s’ August report.

In the meantime, the Australian Securities and Investment­s Commission (ASIC) has suspended Halifax’s financial services licence until January 8, 2021.

In April 2019 it banned Halifax director Jeffrey Worboys and former director Matthew Barnett from providing financial services for six years, based on conduct in relation to a separate matter.

Until February 2018, Worboys and Barnett were joint chief executive officers of Australian Mutual Holdings, an Australian fund manager that operated managed investment schemes including the Courtenay House Capital Investment Fund.

The ASIC found that when establishi­ng that fund, the pair did not exercise the degree of care and diligence required and failed to act in the best interests of the fund’s members.

This included a failure to ensure that the people responsibl­e for trading funds had the required qualificat­ions and experience to manage a foreign exchange and derivative­s fund.

An ASIC spokeswoma­n this week said it continued to receive regular updates from the Halifax liquidator­s and referred the Herald to the Halifax Investment Services key matters page on its website.

There it notes: “ASIC will consider further the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the voluntary administra­tion and liquidatio­n of Halifax, as well as the allegation­s of misconduct raised by the Administra­tors, particular­ly those concerning compliance with laws on conduct and client money.

“Under the law, including the Corporatio­ns Act, licensees must keep client money separate from their own. This is an important safeguard to protect the interests of retail investors.

“ASIC takes matters concerning the protection of client money particular­ly seriously. ASIC notes that breaches of the client money provisions attract criminal penalties.”

The ASIC spokeswoma­n said as the matter was ongoing, it could not provide any further comment at this stage.

This is not the first time Halifax has been in the regulator’s sights.

In 2013 Halifax was the subject of an enforceabl­e undertakin­g with ASIC following regulatory action over a raft of concerns about the operation of the business.

These included failing to adequately monitor its authorised representa­tives, failing to ensure staff were properly trained and adhered to profession­al standards, and failing to have an adequate complaints assessment and handling process.

An independen­t expert was appointed to monitor a plan to rectify the deficienci­es.

The previous year, in 2012, Halifax New Zealand had started trading.

New Zealand moves

The liquidator­s’ report says in New Zealand they are investigat­ing the conduct of the company’s director and former directors.

The sole remaining director is Andrew Gibbs, who was also New Zealand managing director, and through his trust the owner of 30 per cent of the New Zealand business.

Former directors include Christophe­r Weir, Worboys and Veronica Aris, who all resigned on November 25, 2018 — two days before the administra­tor was appointed in this country.

The liquidator­s said they were also “reviewing the company’s informatio­n and documents to determine whether there are any other claims available that will give rise to recoveries for the benefit of creditors”.

Their potential recovery options include looking at shareholde­r loans to determine whether any funds are recoverabl­e, potential breaches of directors’ duties and auditor or accountant negligence, and possible reckless or wrongful trading.

The liquidator­s have lodged a notificati­on with the insurer for claims against the directors and former directors of Halifax NZ.

They have also warned that whether or not they pursue any action depends on the evidence, the availabili­ty of funding, the merits of any legal proceeding­s and the likely return if successful.

Meanwhile, the Financial Markets Authority (FMA) has suspended Halifax’s derivative­s licence.

An FMA spokesman said it opened an investigat­ion into Halifax NZ in February this year. “We cannot comment on the specifics or progress of the investigat­ion, as it is confidenti­al, and it is imperative our investigat­ion is thorough.”

The spokesman said the situation was complex due to the liquidatio­n proceeding­s in both Australia and New Zealand.

“We continue to liaise with the liquidator and with ASIC, the Australian regulator. Our investigat­ion is progressin­g alongside the liquidatio­n.”

Fees mount up

Administra­tion, liquidatio­n and legal fees have already cost close to A$15m and that is before the two-week court hearing due to start at the end of this month.

An August report shows the liquidatio­n and voluntary administra­tion of Halifax Australia had incurred total remunerati­on of A$4.87m and total internal disburseme­nts of A$177,813 by May 31.

On top of that was the remunerati­on incurred by the administra­tors and liquidator­s for Halifax NZ — a further A$1.84m — plus internal disburseme­nts of A$172,168.

And legal costs incurred for the Australian and New Zealand businesses were A$7.7m, paid up to July 31.

The October liquidator­s’ report for Halifax NZ says that as of October this year, liquidator­s for the New Zealand business had only been paid fees of A$838,354 out of the total liquidatio­n fee of A$1.48m.

The liquidator­s said early in 2020 that it became clear the process for approving their remunerati­on by creditor representa­tive groups in Australia and New Zealand was “becoming inefficien­t”, which was resulting in an “unnecessar­ily long and costly” process.

In July the liquidator­s sought guidance from the court on the issue and orders were made by the Australian and New Zealand courts, saying remunerati­on would be reviewed by an independen­t expert before being put to the courts for final approval.

Tony Tesoriero, a former deputy district registrar of the Federal Court of Australia, has been appointed to do this.

In the meantime, Halifax investors continue to ask how much of their money they will get back, and how much longer they will have to keep waiting.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand