Federal Pacific Group, a financial services group with ties to Ireland’s Fexco, has taken a cornerstone stake in GFNZ Group, formerly known as Geneva Finance, and arranged new funding lines for the automobile lender.
FedPac has taken 19.9 percent GFNZ, paying $1.2 million, or 2.75 cents apiece, for 45 million shares. That’s a premium of 112 percent to the current trading price of 1.3 cents per share. GFNZ will also make a pro-rata rights issue to shareholders at the same price.
The Auckland-based firm has also arranged additional funding lines to help grow GFNZ’s loan book and help refinance the company’s debt. GFNZ breached its banking facility covenants twice during the six months ended Sept. 30 when it narrowed its first-half loss to $264,000.
The deal comes after GFNZ Group said last July it hoped to secure new debt and/or equity funding within 12 months after the Financial Markets Authority stopped GFNZ from borrowing money from the public after the company breached a loan agreement with its primary funder the Bank of Scotland.
“FedPac’s support will enable us to fast-track the new business model expansion while maintaining our scheduled debt repayment plan,” managing director David O’Connell said in a statement. “Geneva is operating in a market that has seen many competitors fall away and we see the expansion of the profitable new business model into this space as the key to putting the group on to a long-term and sustainable profitable platform.”
Last March, GFNZ convinced investors to swap debentures and notes in exchange for control of the company by trebling the shares at 5 cents apiece in its third capital reconstruction for the company. The first was in November 2007 when note holders accepted a six-month moratorium as a better offer than winding up the lender.
The lender has been one of the more successful financiers to survive the sector’s collapse, and has repaid $121 million of debt and interest to investors. It owed $132.4 million to investors when it sought a moratorium four years ago.
FedPac operates money transfers, currency trading, investments and personal finance throughout the Pacific region. Kerry-based Fexco bought into the business in 2009 setting up a joint venture with Auckland’s Hutchison family who owned the business.
FedPac’s Alistair Hutchison is also the chairman of CBL Insurance, and has been on the board of governors at the World Bank, International Monetary Fund and Asian Development Bank, and was Financial Secretary to the Samoan Government.
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