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Securities Commission’s silence far from golden [re Property Ventures Ltd insolvency]

May 21, 2014 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Opinion-Piece – Pre-receivership papers on Property Ventures [Limited] suggests our regulators have some explaining to do. writes Chalkie. Just as a dung beetle likes nothing better than burrowing into a big steaming cowpat, providentially plopped into its path by a benevolent donor, Chalkie loves a good document dump. In this case the documents come from the old Securities Commission, since renamed the Financial Markets Authority, and the Ministry for Business Innovation and Employment. They reveal how overseas investors were stiffed by Christchurch-based property developer Property Ventures, more than two years before the company fell into receivership owing $69 million. They show an impotent regulator, unable to act and repeatedly complaining about unanswered correspondence.

They reveal a conflict of interest at the Companies Office [ involving the registrar of companies Mr Neville Harris] that might have affected an inspection of Property Ventures under the Securities Act….

Property Ventures was a development and investment company founded by motivational speaker Adolf de Roos and led by Christchurch-based developer David Ian Henderson….

For more go to: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/opinion-analysis/10065328/Securities-Commissions-silence-far-from-golden

“Chalkie” is written by Fairfax business bureau deputy editor Tim Hunter

For further reading see:

Article published by SPCS on 16 May 2014

David Ian Henderson – Property Ventures Ltd (In Liq.) and role of Liquidator

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Filed Under: Crime, Enforcement Tagged With: Adolf de Roos, conflict of interest, David Ian Henderson, Financial Markets Authority, Neville Harris, Registrar of Companies, Securities Commission

New defender of NZ business reputation

March 12, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

The new Registrar of Companies has signalled a crackdown on dodgy shell companies that take advantage of New Zealand’s reputation for clean business.

Low-profile public servant Mandy McDonald took over from the long-serving Neville Harris earlier this month and in one of her first speaking engagements, at the Corporate Registries Forum in Auckland, said New Zealand had to be vigilant in protecting its reputation.

“Over the past decade we have taken pride in our consistently high World Bank rankings for ease of starting a business and ease of doing business. For a small and distant nation, this remains an important aspect of attracting foreign investment,” she said.

“There have been cases of the misuse of New Zealand-registered companies, leveraging off the good reputation that the New Zealand corporate regulatory regime enjoys internationally.”

McDonald said the Companies and Limited Partnership Bill, awaiting its third reading in Parliament, would give regulators more teeth to investigate suspect companies. The Bill would also require all New Zealand-registered companies to reveal their ultimate owners and have a local director who would be required to disclose their date and place of birth.

“The Bill provides the New Zealand corporate registries system with effective tools to maintain its integrity and deal with those who seek to take advantage of it,” she said.

The forum, a gathering of company registries from 41 countries, finishes on Friday.

McDonald has previously served as general manager of the Insolvency and Trustee Service and has worked as a deputy secretary in the ministries of health, justice and defence.

During his 24-year tenure, her predecessor Harris oversaw the transition of the Companies Office online, a process that began in 1996, and the implementation of the Personal Properties Securities Register in 2002.

McDonald also became the Official Assignee and the Commissioner of Patents, Trademarks, Designs and Plant Variety Types.

Source: Fairfax NZ News. Story by Matt Nippert. Published 12/03/13

http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/8415283/New-defender-of-NZ-business-reputation

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Filed Under: Enforcement Tagged With: dodgy shell companies, Mandy McDonald, Registrar of Companies, shell companies

Why directors of failed firms can dodge bans

September 9, 2012 by SPCS Leave a Comment

One. That’s the number of directors banned from running a company last year by the Registrar of Companies.

Under the Companies Act, the registrar can choose to ban directors when companies fail as a result, even partly, of mismanagement, but insolvency practitioners question whether the system is working.

In the last 9 years, the registrar has banned 185 directors from overseeing firms, running at an average of 20 a year, but in 2011 the wheels fell off when Bridgecorp chairman Bruce Davidson appealed to the High Court against a ban the registrar was planning to impose.

The High Court upheld the ban, and banning orders have started to flow out of the registrar’s office again, but liquidators believe the system lets too many directors preside over multiple company failures. They say the system is ad hoc because of a lack of funding and “bureaucratic failure”.

They claim the Companies Office is under-resourced, as is the Official Assignee, which handles many liquidations. Further, creditors don’t seek bans often enough or fund liquidators to investigate company mismanagement.

Even the Inland Revenue Department, which was the petitioning creditor in 4713 liquidations in 2008, 2009, and 2010 of firms owing $816 million in tax, says it does not have a system to seek banning orders in cases of mismanagement.

Liquidator Robert Walker says liquidators are supposed to report to the registrar breaches of director duties, but few do so.

“There’s no point in reporting to a black hole. It just gets sucked in and disappears,” he says.

If they do report and the registrar tries to act, he says, it will simply produce a massive pushback by directors, who have a right to fight the bans.

“All directors would be writing in saying ‘No, no, no’.” It would be a deluge of calls for reviews. [the Companies Office] would be absolutely swamped.”

His solution is to charge more for company registrations to help pay for liquidators to seek bans through the courts.

Staples Rodway’s Gareth Hoole blames funding for the low numbers of bans. “Where it falls down is that the National Enforcement Unit just doesn’t have the funding.”

The Davidson appeal looks likely to exacerbate that. As a result of that decision, the Business, Innovation and Employment Ministry, which operates the Companies Office, says the registrar reviewed all director-prohibition cases to ensure they were compliant with the court process. In a significant proportion of cases, it was

necessary to gather further information about the failed firms and give the director the chance “to review and respond to this information before the registrar could proceed”.

While the Companies Act places the onus on directors of failed companies to satisfy the registrar that they should not be banned, the ministry says case law requires the registrar to undertake some investigation, such as identifying company mismanagement or director misconduct.

A director has no requirement to notify the registrar of previous failed companies when registering as a director of a newly incorporated company.

Bans of up to five years by the registrar, which were brought in after the 1987 sharemarket crash, are not meant to be punitive, but to protect our system of commerce and creditors from people unfit to carry out the role. The ministry stresses it does not seek to stifle innovation by banning entrepreneurs whose companies fail in the ordinary course of trading.

Ralph Chivers, chief executive of the Institute of Directors, says: “The vast majority of directors in New Zealand take their roles very seriously, are appropriately skilled and do a good job. Like any other profession that involves a position of trust and authority, it is important to have a robust system through which directors can be sanctioned. This is not only important to ensure those who have behaved criminally or negligently are sanctioned but it is also important for public confidence and the reputation of the profession.”

He says the system works “but there is room for improvement”. The various organisations that are part of the system need to be resourced appropriately and have good communication “to ensure the right information gets to the right places”. The institute, he adds, is pleased with some of the new sanctions brought in, including the ability to impose lifetime bans.

“There have been a number of recent improvements in the process for sanctioning directors who have been negligent or deliberately misled investors. The introduction of the FMA in May 2011 has led to a greater focus on compliance and ensuring the most serious offenders are prosecuted – something we think they have been doing very well.”

Chapman Tripp’s Ross Pennington says the country needs to focus more on growth than on negative perceptions that there were gaps in the law.

He points out the current system of penalties is working, resulting in jail sentences for wrongdoers. “For every dollop of retribution, let’s have a dollop of go-forward as well,” he says.

Source: Story by Rob Stock

Fairfax NZ News. Published 09/09/12

http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/7639682/Why-directors-of-failed-firms-can-dodge-bans

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Filed Under: Enforcement Tagged With: banning orders, Companies Act, failed companies, Registrar of Companies

The Deputy Registrar of Companies on banned company directors

May 22, 2010 by SPCS Leave a Comment

The Deputy Registrar of Companies, Peter Barker, issued a media release on 19 May 2010 (InfoNews) noting:

The Registrar of Companies has the power under section 385 of the Companies Act 1993 to prohibit persons from being a director, or involved in the management of companies. The power can apply to any person who has been a director, or involved in the management of, a failed company or companies within the previous 5 years. Where a person has been identified as a candidate for prohibition on the basis of multiple failed companies the onus is on that person to satisfy the Registrar that their management of the affairs of those companies was not at least partly responsible for their demise, or that prohibition would not be just or equitable .

Prohibition: The maximum term of prohibition under Section 385(3) of the Companies Act 1993 is five years. The prohibition prevents those concerned from acting as directors or promoters of a company, or being concerned in, or taking part, whether directly or indirectly, in the management of a company.

Penalty: Failure to comply with the notice of prohibition is an offence and persons are liable upon conviction to a penalty of up to 5 years imprisonment or a fine not exceeding $200,000.

Source: http://www.infonews.co.nz/news.cfm?id=38400

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Filed Under: Other Tagged With: companies, Companies Act 1993, Deputy Registrar of Companies, director, failed companies, failed company, imprisonment, infonews, infonews.co.nz, management, Peter Barker, prohibition, Registrar of Companies, section 385, section 385(3)

Steve Crow appoints his brother and sister to direct HWGA Co. Ltd

May 17, 2010 by SPCS Leave a Comment

The major shareholder of porn ‘mother company’ CVC Group Ltd, from which Steve Crow has just resigned as director, is HWGA Co. Ltd which owns 40% of the CVC Group shares. Steve Crow who for the last ten months has been sole director of HWGA Co. Ltd and still remains its director, has today registered with the Companies Office, the appointment of CVC Group shareholder Leanne Marie Osborn. his sister and David Bruce Crow his bother, as two additional directors – effective from 15 May 2010. The Society lodged formal complaints with the Companies Office last year over the attempted appointment of David Crow as a director of HWGA Co. Ltd by Steve Crow and this led to the appointment (lodged as pending on the website) being withdrawn. [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Pornography Tagged With: Buildwise Ltd, CVC Group Ltd, David Bruce Crow, David Crow, Fitzroy, HWGA Co Ltd, Leanne Marie Osborn, Leanne Osborn, liquidation, New Plymouth, Registrar of Companies, secured creditors, shareholder, Steve Crow, unsecured creditors

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