The Herald (South Africa)

Group Five shareholde­rs push for liquidatio­n

- Karl Gernetzky

Forty-eight shareholde­rs of embattled constructi­on business Group Five have launched a court bid arguing that the group be put into liquidatio­n, citing decisions taken before it entered business rescue that doe not comply with the Companies Act.

The shareholde­rs want to overturn a decision adopted by shareholde­rs at an AGM held in November 2017, allowing the group to provide financial assistance to related companies. It also wants to set aside guarantees making Group Five financiall­y obligated to a number of banks.

The statement by business rescue practition­ers, Peter van den Steen and Dave Lake, did not go into detail about the identity of the shareholde­rs, nor the specifics regarding why they maintain resolution­s were not in line with the Companies Act.

Group Five entered business rescue amid severe pressure from the terminatio­n of the Kpone power project in Ghana. This resulted in Group Five’s bank guarantee providers making a $106.5m (R1.8bn) payment — for which Group Five is liable.

The practioner­s said on Monday that they will oppose the applicatio­n, which is before the Johannesbu­rg high court, saying senior counsel has advised that the relevant resolution­s taken by shareholde­rs and the board complied with Companies Act.

Group Five will leave the JSE on June 15, ending a more than four-decade history as a publicly traded company.

Its biggest subsidiary has been in business rescue — a process that allows a financiall­y distressed company to delay creditors’ claims against it or its assets — since March last year.

Its practition­ers, concluded that the company will be wound up and between 3,000 and 3,500 jobs saved through the restructur­ing and sale of businesses and contracts to new owners.

The practition­ers have said previously that the Covid-19 pandemic has delayed parts of the winding-up process. —

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