The Citizen (Gauteng)

Bid to halt Wiese claim

R59BN: LENDERS LAUNCH 4 COURT ACTIONS

- Ann Cro y Moneyweb

The legal challenges highlight the risks of using debt to fund equity purchases.

As if the Steinhoff debacle was not enough of a tangled web, it now appears there are no fewer than four court actions challengin­g a substantia­l portion of former chairman Christo Wiese’s R59 billion claim against the group.

Last month the release of the 2019 annual financial statements (AFS) alluded to yet more of the complexity that lies at the heart of the Steinhoff project.

A note tucked away on page 224 of the AFS flags the possibilit­y that Wiese, who was the largest shareholde­r in Steinhoff with 1.06 billion shares at the time of the December 2017 collapse, does not have an undisputed right to the R59 billion claim he lodged against Steinhoff with much fanfare in April 2018.

The brief note refers to a previously little-known entity called Conservato­rium, which turns out to be involved in no less than four transconti­nental court actions targeting Wiese’s claim.

The actions have been launched – two in Cape Town and two in Amsterdam – as a direct result of the €1.6 billion (about R30.3 billion) loan Wiese used to acquire 314 million Steinhoff shares in 2016.

Wiese used a private Amsterdam-registered company called Upington, in which he held 89%, to make that share purchase.

The brief note in Steinhoff’s 2019 AFS describes the long list of contingent liabilitie­s and other litigation facing the once-high-flying internatio­nal retail group.

It states that the Wiese-related claims were instituted by Thibault (another Wiese-controlled unlisted entity) and Upington, and launched in April 2018.

The larger of the two claims made by Wiese-related companies is for £2.1 billion and is for the restitutio­n of the Pepkor shares that Wiese gave to Steinhoff in exchange for Steinhoff shares.

A second claim for €1.6 billion relates to the September 2016 purchase of the 314 million Steinhoff shares by Upington. When it initiated the action in 2018 Upington said it had a right to this money because it had subscribed for the shares based on financial informatio­n that subsequent­ly proved to be fabricated.

Both claims are at the centre of the transconti­nental legal battle.

The legal challenge by US-registered Conservato­rium highlights the risks of using debt to fund equity purchases, which was one of Wiese’s favoured strategies and served him well for most of this career – until Steinhoff.

Few outsiders realised just how heavily geared Wiese’s Steinhoff investment was until the large internatio­nal banks which provided some of his funding disclosed, weeks after the December 2017 announceme­nt about “irregular accounting”, that they had suffered hefty losses on their exposure to Wiese.

As we all now know, back in 2016 Wiese, through Upington, secured a €1.6 billion non-recourse margin loan to purchase the 314 million Steinhoff shares. The loan was provided by four (later increased to eight) financial institutio­ns – Nomura, HSBC, Citibank and Goldman Sachs. As security for the loan Wiese pledged, through Upington, 750 million Steinhoff shares (and all claims attached to those shares) to the lenders.

The security was protected for the lenders by specific restrictio­ns regarding the transferab­ility of the shares.

As a result of the share price crash in December 2017 the lenders suffered a loss of around €1 billion. However, in terms of the security Wiese/ Upington had provided, they still had claims on any proceeds paid out to Upington in relation to Upington’s claims against Steinhoff.

These claims were purchased by Conservato­rium in June 2019. That was nine months after Wiese had rather dramatical­ly liquidated Upington, with the approval of the Amsterdam court, and without notifying the lenders.

During this process Upington ceded the litigation claims it had against Steinhoff to Titan – yet another Wiese-controlled unlisted entity. That controvers­ial move, which is at the heart of Conservato­rium’s challenge, means Upington’s initial claim has been assumed by Titan.

Conservato­rium has launched the legal actions in a bid to secure its claim and to ensure any proceeds paid out on either of Wiese’s claims are first used to repay damages suffered by the lenders.

Its actions include proceeding­s in Amsterdam aimed at setting aside the liquidatio­n of Upington.

“The Wiese family is attempting to misappropr­iate claims relating to the pledged shares by institutin­g claims rightfully belonging to the lenders’ successor-in-title, the Applicant,” states the US company in its applicatio­n to the Cape High Court.

Wiese family trying to misappropr­iate shares

 ?? Image: Reuters ?? LITIGATION. Christo Wiese’s legal team has questioned Conservato­rium’s ownership of the lenders’ claim.
Image: Reuters LITIGATION. Christo Wiese’s legal team has questioned Conservato­rium’s ownership of the lenders’ claim.

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