Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Two heads of Touchwood resign amidst attempts to resurrect the firm

- By Duruthu Edirimuni Chandrasek­era and Raj Moorth An elderly shareholde­r being given a helping hand to attend the AGM. Pic by Nilan Maligaspe. y

wo heads of Touchwood Investment­s, the troubled forestry management company have tendered their resignatio­ns on Friday in the wake of attempts by new investors to resurrect the company .

In a stock market disclosure,Touchwood Investment­s announced that its Chairman Roscoe Meloney and Vice Chairman / CEO Swarna Maloney have resigned from the positions they were holding in the company.

The announceme­nt said that their resignatio­n came into effect from the 26th of September. It added that the husband and wife duo would remain as ‘Non Executive Independen­t Directors’ of the firm.

Meanwhile the Colombo Stock Exchange said that it has imposed a Trading Halt on the company pending a disclosure regarding media reports.

This is the third time trading has come to a halt and it came early morning – about an hour into trading. The share gained by more than 50 per cent witnessing enormous retailer participat­ion on Thursday

New investors of the company , on Thursday pledged to invest US$21 million from overseas business interests to bail out the organizati­on.

The move came even as the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) said it was continuing a probe in the company’s affairs.

The no-interest loan from Singapore backers of the new investors was sufficient to lift the company from its present plight, which is due to the fault of some staff and outsiders, according to company’s out going chairman Roscoe Maloney. These announceme­nts

Twere made at the company’s 14th annual general meeting held at Hotel Renuka, Colombo and chaired by new Executive Director cum acting CEO Lanka Wijendra Kiwlegeder­a, a former senior manager at the company, who was appointed to both positions this week.

Shareholde­rs were told the loan is returnable in 10-15 years time.

In a stunning series of announceme­nts on Tuesday and Wednesday, the embattled company said ruling party parliament­arian Duminda Silva, who is a suspect in a murder case, has been appointed as an executive director while Solomon Kankanamge Dhammika, Vice Chairman of the South Asian (7-a-side) Football Associatio­n and Director of Benchmark Education Institute, Matara has been appointed Executive Director.

The announceme­nts saw the share price soar to Rs 4.70 per share from Rs. 3.10 and even lower as speculator­s took over sensing Mr. Silva’s entry as a signal of powerful government backing to resurrect the firm.

Mr. Maloney is abroad but he spoke through a video-presentati­on where he said the crisis was due to manipulati­on from within the company and outside.

He was confident that the new team would resurrect the company and called for shareholde­r support to the bail-out plan. Mr. Kiwlegeder­a who chaired the meeting as pro-tem chairman said the entry of Mr. Silva with his business interests here and overseas and strong government connection­s would result in state support for the firm.

The pro-tem chairman announced the new directors who were however not present at the meeting.

Shareholde­rs complained that there was no intimation to them about the new appointmen­ts, apart from the announceme­nts in the market.

They were also told of plans to further re-structure the board of directors of the company, in which Maloney and his wife Swarna (founders of Touchwood) hold a small stake.

Other directors at the head table were L.L. Kulathunga, the most senior director, Soloman Dammika and Upul Pieris. Ms. Swarana Maloney, Vice Chairperso­n was not present.

In the past 10 days, the SEC has suspending trading in the company shares on two occasions amidst a probe into its affairs while a depositor/investor in the company has filed a winding up action.

Asked whether the probe is over, a SEC spokespers­on said, “No … not yet, the investigat­ion is still going on. As a policy the SEC does not give informatio­n out about the progress of ongoing investigat­ions.”

K.C. Vignarajah, good governance activist and shareholde­r, welcomed the new initiative saying any effort to resuscitat­e a troubled company should be appreciate­d. However he pointed out that the board had not followed the due process of 21 days notice to shareholde­rs on the appointmen­t of new directors before the AGM was held.

He also cited Art. 275 of the Companies Act which says that in the event of a winding up action all share transactio­ns are void unless a court decides otherwise. He was also concerned that the SEC had lifted the ban on trading without any explanatio­n to shareholde­rs.

However Mr. Kiwlegeder­a said the company has enough money and this situation has been explained to the SEC.

One of the shareholde­rs, present at the AGM, told the Business Times on the sidelines of the meeting that, “the management will be bringing about US$21 million to solve some of the problems within the company. The new independen­t director Mr. Duminda Silva is a business man and his involvemen­t in the company is good in a way. If he does something bad it will tarnish his name.

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