Weekend Herald

Greens say acceptance of Hellaby offer not about family issues

- Hamish Fletcher hamish. fletcher@ nzherald. co. nz

Rich- listers Maryanne and John Green say family issues had nothing to do with their company agreeing to sell its stake in Hellaby Holdings to Australia’s Bapcor.

The siblings are the beneficiar­ies of the Hugh Green Trust, which owns the company Castle Investment­s. Castle is Hellaby’s single largest shareholde­r.

Hellaby i s facing a takeover bid from Bapcor and the company wants its shareholde­rs to reject the Austra- lian firm’s offer at $ 3.30 per share.

Both sides have engaged in a war of words during the takeover attempt, which if successful would see Bapcor keep Hellaby’s auto parts business but sell other arms of the NZX- listed company.

Castle holds 27.2 per cent of Hellaby’s shares and entered into a “pre- bid lock- up agreement” with Bapcor to accept the offer.

In a letter sent to Hellaby shareholde­rs yesterday, Castle said the price offered by Bapcor was “compelling”.

The letter, signed by two trustees of the Hugh Green Trust and Maryanne and John Green, said Castle had accepted the offer because of a “high degree of risk and uncertaint­y associated with Hellaby’s ability to deliver on its growth aspiration­s”.

“Whilst Castle Investment­s would welcome an increase in the offer price, we would be most disappoint­ed if Bapcor walked away from the offer,” the letter said. “We urge our fellow shareholde­rs, provided you share our view, to join us in accepting this offer as soon as possible.”

The letter also said that there were concerns about reports that Hellaby had “characteri­sed the acceptance of the offer as being influenced by family matters”.

“We feel that the strong implicatio­n to be taken from the various Hellaby public statements i s that Castle Investment­s has only accepted the offer because of matters involving the Green family. This is wrong . . . we accepted on the basis that the offer price is above our view of fair value of Hellaby shares,” the letter said.

After Hugh Green died in 2012, Maryanne and other members of the family fought for control of his $ 400 million empire. The eldest daughter of philanthro­pist Hugh Green had been chief executive of the familyowne­d property firm, the Green Group, but left in the 12 months before he died.

She won a major legal victory last year when then Chief High Court Judge Helen Winkelmann found Hugh Green had been subject to undue influence from John when Hugh Green made a series of decisions in the last year of his life.

Justice Winkelmann reappointe­d Maryanne to Green Group companies and declared she was a trustee of the Hugh Green Trust and Hugh Green Property Trust, which control the business side of the Green Group.

The Court of Appeal last month dismissed a challenge to Maryanne’s reappointm­ent.

Castle’s letter said: “The trustees and Green family members are united in the belief that the offer represents fair value.”

Hellaby’s independen­t valuation from Grant Samuel was $ 3.60 to $ 4.12 a share.

Hellaby shares closed up 5c yesterday at $ 3.39.

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