Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

New side of the Qoin for Bartercard

- ALISTER THOMSON alister.thomson@news.com.au

GOLD Coast-founded trade exchange business Bartercard has taken until its 30th year to launch a product for consumers.

Bartercard was founded in 1991 by Wayne Sharpe, Andrew Federowsky and Brian Hall.

It grew to become the world’s largest trade exchange with offices in seven countries and thousands of merchants, who used Bartercard dollars to trade, across Australia.

In 2007 the local management team, comprised of Trevor Dietz, Mr Hall and South African expatriate Tony Wiese, bought the Australian arm for $25.5 million and went on to buy the internatio­nal arm.

The three retained a 52 per cent stake in the business when it launched on the ASX as BPS Technology and valued at $58.5 million.

In 2016, the listed entity took a huge step when it bought Entertainm­ent Publicatio­ns, a restaurant and activity guide that provided discounts from restaurant­s, hotels and attraction­s in Australia and New Zealand and was distribute­d by tens of thousands of not-for-profit or

ganisation­s. That brought the attention of hedge funds led by Moelis eager to tap into the $65 million in revenue the business brought in to BPS coffers in FY17.

A boardroom brawl ensued, which led to the resignatio­n of Mr Dietz as CEO and Mr Wiese and Mr Hall from the board.

The company (which changed its name to IncentiaPa­y) posted a loss of $62 million in FY18 and saw its share price collapse to as low as 1.5c (from 84 before the stoush).

Mr Wiese was approached to buy back Bartercard Australia and New Zealand from IncentiaPa­y at the end of 2018, which he did for $5 million.

“It started because they (the hedge funds) wanted to buy half our shares,” Mr Wiese said. “They first courted us with an offer to buy half our shares at 75c each. We could have made a few million dollars each.”

He said the funds wanted to pick the chairman and CEO, drive the share price up above $2, and cut staff to double the profit.

But after advice from their lawyers, the BPS Technology board decided to back out of the deal.

Mr Wiese said the funds then went “hostile” and threatened them during the meeting.

What followed was a battle for control that Mr Wiese and his fellow directors lost, resigning in February 2018 after an unsuccessf­ul board spill.

But Mr Wiese said the funds lost out in the long run – pointing towards the shattered share price and a revolving door of management at IncentiaPa­y.

“They took two tigers by the tail,” he said.

“One was Bartercard and the other was Entertainm­ent Publicatio­ns.

“They are both very hard businesses. Entertainm­ent has its own nuances and is extremely seasonal. They sell all their books between April and August so eight months of the year is no cashflow.”

Mr Wiese said he jumped at the chance to buy Bartercard back when the offer came. He said after a year of stabilisin­g the company, following savage cuts to management by the funds, Bartercard was ready to start growing again.

It has establishe­d crypto currency Qoin (the Q stands for Queensland) as a way of merging the private Bartercard trade exchange model with a public network through blockchain technology.

Non-Bartercard members who are Qoin users will now be able to trade with Bartercard

merchants – something that was not possible before. The Bartercard dollars will also be able to be spent with Qoin merchants.

“The invention of blockchain has made it possible for the consumer to also participat­e in the merchant ecosystem we created,” he said.

“Now any consumer … can acquire Qoin and take part in the system.

“If, for example, you want to sell your caravan or gym equipment you can sell those on the Qoin marketplac­e and earn Qoin which you can spend in the system or hold on to as a growing asset.”

Qoin is owned by the Qoin Associatio­n, which is an initiative of Bartercard entity Blockchain Investment­s Pty

Ltd and registered NFP One Light Charity Foundation.

Mr Wiese said Qoin brings a lot of trading opportunit­ies for Bartercard members.

Bartercard plans to raise revenue by providing services to Qoin users.

 ?? Picture: TIM MARSDEN ?? Former director Tony Wiese has bought back Bartercard and establishe­d a crypto currency called Qoin.
Picture: TIM MARSDEN Former director Tony Wiese has bought back Bartercard and establishe­d a crypto currency called Qoin.
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