Oman Daily Observer

Scandal-hit Greensill parent group enters liquidatio­n

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LONDON: The Australian parent of failed specialist finance firm Greensill Capital, whose recent collapse sparked worldwide corporate fallout and a political scandal in Britain, has entered liquidatio­n, administra­tors said on Thursday.

The demise of Greensill Capital Pty Ltd is the latest chapter in a saga that has ensnared Conservati­ve politician­s including ex-prime minister David Cameron.

The company had filed for bankruptcy last month for its operations in Britain, and also in Australia where its parent group is based and Germany where it has a banking arm.

Greensill’s implosion threatens about 50,000 jobs at companies that relied on its supply chain financing, including the steel empire of Indian-british billionair­e Sanjeev Gupta.

Greensill Capital Pty Ltd, which is the parent company of the Global Greensill Group, had provided head office support and sourced funding for the finance giant’s operations.

Creditors including Credit Suisse, Japan’s Softbank and the Associatio­n of German Banks met online early on Thursday and “resolved to place the company into liquidatio­n”, according to a statement from administra­tors Grant Thornton.

The administra­tor provided an overview of the company to its 41 creditors and their representa­tives, who then voted in favour of liquidatio­n.

Administra­tors will now wind down activities and attempt to sell off chunks of the business, which was founded in 2011 by Australian Lex Greensill.

“As of today, the company is now in liquidatio­n,” Grant Thornton added in the statement.

“The liquidator­s will continue to identify and realise available assets, monitor developmen­ts in relation to the administra­tions of Greensill UK and the Greensill Bank AG, and continue their investigat­ions in relation to Greensill Capital Pty Limited in liquidatio­n.”

The controvers­ial company specialise­d in short-term corporate loans via a complex business model that ultimately sparked its declaratio­n of insolvency.

Lex Greensill had obtained inside access to the Downing Street machine of then-premier Cameron, on the promise of helping to provide the government with the latest thinking on financial technology.

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