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South Canterbury CEO Lachie McLeod leaving to ‘pursue farming interests’ (Update 2)

November 26th, 2009

South Canterbury Finance Chairman Allan Hubbard has told the troubled finance company’s annual meeting in Timaru today that Chief Executive Lachie McLeod will leave the company to pursue farming interests and be replaced on an interim basis by Timaru chartered accountant Nigel Gormack. (Update 3 includes comments from McLeod).

South Canterbury said McLeod would finish on November 30 and be succeeded by Gormack (pictured left), who is a fellow director of Hubbard in Hubbard Churcher Trust Management Ltd, Companies Office records show. South Canterbury said it would look for a new permanent CEO to lead it next year when the group would be recapitalised, although it gave no new details of when that might be.

“The last 18 months have been particularly turbulent for the finance industry with pressures unleashed by the global financial crisis, new regulations and the difficult trading environment,” McLeod said in a statement released by South Canterbury.

“South Canterbury Finance is now on a more stable footing with a diversified portfolio of assets that will underpin its future. This is the right time to find and establish a new Chief Executive who can oversee the recapitalisation that will take place next year, position for the implementation of the new regulatory framework and meet the new challenges the industry will face.”

McLeod will continue to work with South Canterbury Finance as a consultant until a new Chief Executive is appointed. McLeod would then work as a consultant to the other business interests of Hubbard.

Hubbard said he fully understood the reasons for McLeod’s decision to resign.

“Lachie has provided leadership to guide the Company through this difficult period and worked tirelessly to achieve a positive outcome for investors, shareholders and staff. On behalf of the directors I thank him for all he has done.”

McLeod said he would be focusing on his family and farming interests when his day to day involvement with the group ended.

The Timaru Herald reported the following from the meeting.

The group, controlled by veteran Timaru businessman Hubbard, is looking to raise more than $100 million as it strives to get back on an even keel and reduce exposure to troubled property loans.

Hubbard, also controlling shareholder of the Southbury Group, said on October 31 SCF and Southbury would probably announce restructure and recapitalisation plans by the middle or end of November.

Southbury would probably float on the sharemarket in February-March 2010. The float would involve the entities that made up Southbury, and possibly also two other companies. Broker Forsyth Barr is helping organise the float details, though how much had to be raised was yet to be decided.

The Southbury Group components included Dairy Holdings and Helicopters NZ. The group also includes Scales Corp.

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55 Responses to “South Canterbury CEO Lachie McLeod leaving to ‘pursue farming interests’ (Update 2)”

  1. chip Says:

    Guess thats one way of getting rid of $20m of ‘related party’ loans!! Trouble is , how will McLeod ever pay this back? Thats alot of sheep to shear at 40c each!!

  2. Alan Says:

    Not good to lose the CEO a few months before Southbury is wanting to float.

    Those with funds in SCF maturing after the Govt guarantee expires on (11th ?) Oct 2010 might start getting very nervous….

    Alan.

  3. Bernard Hickey Says:

    Boris the Frog

    Many thanks for your insights, but unfortunately we can’t prove them and can’t leave them up.

    Cheers
    Bernard

  4. Boris the Frog Says:

    Bernard,

    Do a company office search on Gormack… director of Hubbard Churcher Trust Management for example?? I could go on…

    And McLoed – ask anyone who has had dealing with him… v uninmpressive…

  5. Ian Says:

    Is this the start of the end for SCF or just another bolter from the team.Why would anyone want to go farming in the current economic climate,unless there is more to this than meets the eye.Anyone with cash in SCF would have reason to be a tad nervous.

  6. chip Says:

    What happened to freedom of speech? Each poster here submits a contact email address and therefore is accountable for their comments should a court order discovery.
    The site owner has NO exposure whatsoever for bloggers comments, legally.

    Moderation on blogs like this should be limited to profanity and abuse imho!
    Chip

  7. PeterR Says:

    Chip.

    Agreed.

  8. alan stewart Says:

    well bernard allows contributions from all and sundry without favour and lets us pretend that we have something important to say,that doesnt mean he should let numpties loose to libel allan hubbard,he might be old but that doesnt mean he hasnt got any teeth!

  9. Andy Rodgers Says:

    It will be interesting to read Chris Lee’s spin on this announcement!

  10. mouse Says:

    Much more fun washing the shite out the shed, than pushing it up Hill… Good on ya Lachie!

  11. someone_who_knows Says:

    Worst possible timing…certainly appears a team they are no more.

  12. Bernard Hickey Says:

    Chip

    “The site owner has NO exposure whatsoever for bloggers comments, legally.”

    If only that were true. We are completely responsible for whatever someone else says on the blog in the comments. There may be some defence in the few moments between when you’ve hit publish and I read it in that I haven’t acquiesced to the publication.
    Once I read it and choose to either leave it up or take it down, it’s as if we have said it.
    I’ve been around the media for 20 years and have seen my fair share of legal complaints and amazing defamation suits.

    FYI here

    http://www.findlaw.com/12international/countries/nz/articles/852.html

    cheers
    Bernard

  13. Bernard Hickey Says:

    Allan Hubbard is the man behind South Canterbury Finance and the man that Mums and Dads are trusting. Not Lachie McLeod.

    cheers
    Bernard

  14. Drflux Says:

    Good call Bernard,

    Allan Hubbard will be playing out a strategy. I’m sure time will tell and any bleating on these blogs won’t speed him up (if indeed he ever bothered to listen)
    Note the surge in SCFHA securities on the NZDX today…

  15. International Farmer Says:

    Southbury wanting to float? I don’t think so. Stuart Nattrass is a director of Southbury, and up until recently a director of Fonterra, bowing out accusing shareholders of being ’social creditors’ (whatever that is suppose to mean in reference to members of a co-operative), and bemoaning the state of calfshed meetings and provincial motels.
    Having being a director for a large co-op for the last 6 years (“a 24/7 job”) which vehemently resisted a ‘partial’ float, you would think there would be some opposition within southbury group for listing.

  16. International Farmer Says:

    Apologies, my source lists Stuart Nattrass as being a shareholder of Southbury Group Ltd

  17. ruru Says:

    Old Father Hubbard has cleaned out the cowshed at last. Interesting to watch what happens next. And yes Chip, do $20m of loans go with the CEO job every time? They’re now unrelated-party loans, so that’s okay, move on, nothing to see here.

  18. David Hillary Says:

    South Canterbury Finance CEO Lachie McLeod ‘required to take risks that were not appropriate’ according to Chris Lee

    See http://davidhillary.blogspot.com/2009/11/south-canterbury-finance-ceo-lachie.html

  19. We are Stuffed Says:

    # Bernard Hickey Says:
    November 26th, 2009 at 9:54 pm

    Allan Hubbard is the man behind South Canterbury Finance and the man that Mums and Dads are trusting. Not Lachie McLeod.

    cheers
    Bernard

    The 2010 Government Guarantee is all this investor is trusting:)

  20. PeterR Says:

    Can someone please explain how Lachie McLeod’s resignation removes his loans from being ‘related party’?

  21. Doug Says:

    If South Canterbury is underwater and needs $100m to stay afloat, well that’s serious. McLatchie’s departure is hardly a thumbs up for Mom and Dad throwing more into the black hole of yet another New Zealand Finance Company. I would like to know today’s book value of their assets.

  22. andy hamilton Says:

    Personally I would put the odds of SCF triggering a government guarantee in the next 12 months at more than 80%.

    I think Treasury believe the odds are pretty damn high as well – that why they have made provisions against the guarantee of $850m.

    I read elsewhere that SCF had pulled in $70m with the new prospectus – sounds a lot, but its not really given they were offering 8% with a government guarantee on their ’till guarantee expiration’ debenture. I reckon its enough to keep them afloat till early next year (and hope something good comes along)………

  23. David Hillary Says:

    the loan to the ex CEO is still a related party loan, since the guy holds shares in the parent company, I figure.

  24. Doug Says:

    @Boris and Chip – Get your own blog and test the waters on libel applications. This platform is great, precisely because of the freedom we have to share points of view.

  25. Andy Rodgers Says:

    andyh – I agree and isn’t nice for SCF when the current GG is free (courtesy of the NZ taxpayer). I suppose that this is one of the benefits of being able to summon the PM to Timaru.

  26. andy hamilton Says:

    Yes it would be intriguing if this was just a ’strategic’ removal of the CEO to make the $20m of related party loans ‘disappear’.

    Stranger things have been known to happen in good ol’Aotearoa……

    The fact that such thoughts even occur says everything you need to know about the trust that we hold Finance companies in.

  27. Doug Says:

    I hope English pulls the plug on backstopping Finance Companies, period. Better to clear out the deadwood and help investors by encouraging them to exercise better risk/reward in the instruments they choose. Aussie Banks may be usurious, but anything is better than investing in the lifestyles of New Zealand’s entitled through Ponzi schemes.

  28. TumTeTum Says:

    Fantastick, Nigel Gormack is really on the ball (not) – it was just last week at a National Bank seminar he was talking about our current top tax rate being 39%!! (Top tax rate is actually 38% for anyone who doesn’t know.)

    SCF is gurgling terminally

  29. Chris Says:

    Hey, let’s get real here. McLeod was never officer material – he was there to do what allan “my cupboard is bare” hubbard told him. just keep those related party loans flowing please. so he did. he was rewarded with a loan to buy shares in Southbury. in the first nanosecond of the new directors’ regime (who’ve been given a crown indemnity) he’s marched out and a patsy put in while they get someone with a death wish organised for the job. already they’ve found another $50m in crap loans in the book. just as people thought the titanic was unsinkable they think scf can’t fail. the idea is so scary it can’t happen surely. the only thing between scf and statutory management is bayliss and co. let us pray for them. those with a black sense of humour will love the pic in the press today of a dumbass shareholder giving hubbard a personal plate SCFAAA. make that SCFB- negative when S&P announce their next rating.

  30. Bernard Hickey Says:

    Chris,

    Where are you seeing that South Canterbury have found another NZ$50 million in impaired loans.

    It’s worth saying too your comments above are honestly held opinion.

    Let’s puts facts around the rhetoric.

    Can you also be more specific about this:
    “The only thing between scf and statutory management is bayliss and co” I haven’t seen anything more to justify this.

    cheers.

    Bernard

  31. chris Says:

    i don’t engage in rhetoric. it is indeed my honestly held opinion that further impaired loans have been discovered in the loan book. my source is from within the company. while the three directors have been ostensibly appointed by hubbard, they first obtained a crown indemnity so that they could not be personally sued over any decisions they might make. perhaps you could ask one of the directors to confirm this? despite the undoubted combined skills of the three directors (three of the most experienced in nz) in my view scf has reached the stage where the only sensible solution is statutory management (aka chapter 11 in the us). S&P are about to downgrade once again, the southbury rescue ipo will face extreme difficulty, there’s real doubt that the crown guarantee can be renewed even if treasury wanted to. there’ll be a massive outflow of funds if it’s not renewed. including those trustees etc at risk because of no investment grade.

  32. TumTeTum Says:

    Put facts around rhetoric Bernard?! Surely not!

    You never answered my request to provide facts that would back up your comment “The net result will be more debt” regarding Fonterra’s restructure proposal. Ever since then I’ve regarded this site as being mainly rhetoric nonsense!!

    Let’s see you ‘put facts around the rhetoric’ regarding your comment, please.

  33. Bernard Hickey Says:

    TumTeTum

    My point on the Fonterra restructure is that not all of the Fonterra capital raising will be used to repay Fonterra’s debt. Some will go to expanding its business and potentially subsidising this year’s payout.
    The net result for the industry, including both farmers and Fonterra, will be higher debt. That’s because farmers will not be selling their own assets or using their own cash to buy the shares. They are already going to their banks to borrow the money.
    Fonterra and the industry needs more equity, not debt.

    cheers
    Bernard

  34. David Hillary Says:

    Re SCF credit rating, see:
    What Credit Rating for a Financial Institution that ran out of Cash Last Week?
    UPDATED (23 Nov)
    http://davidhillary.blogspot.com/2009/10/what-credit-rating-for-financial.html
    and
    South Canterbury Finance Credit Rating Timeline
    http://davidhillary.blogspot.com/2009/11/south-canterbury-finance-credit-rating.html

  35. TumTeTum Says:

    Bernard

    You said: “That’s because farmers will not be selling their own assets or using their own cash to buy the shares. They are already going to their banks to borrow the money.”

    That is where you are wrong Bernard, and that is the point I was trying to make. You assume that every single dairy farmer in NZ has debt, which is just totally incorrect. There are dairy farmers who have been debt free for years, and others who got debt free in the recent boom. Their ‘dry shares’ will be purchased with real money from a real bank account, creating real equity for Fonterra.

    This is the same as some people who post on this site seem to think every rental property has a mortgage against it. I was talking to a guy last week who had 10 rental properties, and didn’t have a stitch of debt!!

    More facts needed, less rhetoric please, or you will lose my interest.

  36. chris Says:

    debtwise dairy farmers are in three categories. the first are those who’ve been dairying for 20 years or more and have little or no debt. in good times they may have bought more land but even so are debt-free. then there’s a group who came in 10-15years ago. they have prudent levels of debt and a low price is not too much a worry. then there’s the five years or less people. they borrowed to the max but shd have budgetted on a conservative price in terms of borrowing. many didn’t. it’s those who are in trouble (reference hubbard’s dairy holdings ltd).

  37. chip Says:

    Not hard to see $50m of new impaired loans by simply looking at the level of property development loans on SCF books, and the continuing asset value ‘tanking’ in that sector , not to mention the lack of financing alternatives.
    As each capitalised interest loan falls due , most will be going ‘bad’ imho .. simple reality , I do not know of anyone in the property development or banking sectors that holds a differing view to this!
    Chip

  38. Bernard Hickey Says:

    TumTeTum
    Many thanks. Fair enough. Let’s have a look at what is happening with agricultural debt, which we do have figures for. Agricultural debt, which most people agree is about two thirds dairy debt, has risen NZ$4.247 billion in the last year to October to NZ$46.9 billon, according to data in C5 of the RBNZ series. Dairy debt has more than doubled to NZ$31 billion in the last 5 years while Fonterra revenues have risen 30% to NZ$16 billion. http://rbnz.govt.nz/statistics/monfin/RegBanksNBLIs/3822930.html
    Assuming two thirds of that growth is dairy debt, which is probably conservative then dairy debt rose around NZ$2.8 billion last year to NZ$31 billion. Those figures would include lending to Fonterra of around NZ$9 billion. Fonterra’s annual report (page 42 of 104 here) shows it had debt of around NZ$9.3 billion at the end of July this year. http://www.fonterra.com/wps/wcm/connect/9704ee804009ef6aa916ad21d66da0e1/2009+Annual+Report_FINAL.pdf?MOD=AJPERES

    My argument is that the overall industry’s debt is likely to rise because of this capital raising, given that even without the capital raising it has risen sharply.
    You are right of course that many farmers have no debt. But do they have that cash sitting in their bank accounts? Or will even the debt free ones choose to leverage up a bit to buy those shares? My banking sources say they are doing that right now.

    And is any cash drawdown enough to offset the extra debt to be taken on by the big new farmers and all those indebted from acquisition sprees of neighbours?
    My point is that overall debt for the industry is likely to rise, not fall because of this capital restructure.

    Do you think it’s sustainable that an industry’s revenues have risen 30% in the last 5 years while its debt has risen more than 100%.

    cheers
    Bernard

  39. AndrewJ Says:

    Bernard

    Assuming two thirds of that growth is dairy debt, which is probably conservative then dairy debt rose around NZ$2.8 billion last year to NZ$31 billion. Those figures would include lending to Fonterra of around NZ$9 billion.

    My belief is that Fonterra’s debt is not included in the farm debt figures.

    Peter R has some good info on dairy and Fonterra

    http://www.agprodecon.org/node/36

  40. David Hillary Says:

    Bernard, I think you are saying that dairy debt will rise not because of the capital raising, but in spite of it.

  41. TumTeTum Says:

    I have wasted enough time on this, but I would like to agree that the rise in debt relative to income was not sustainable. These figures are distorted however by the large new dairy farms and the Crafar types who just went crazy.

    I still struggle to see how it won’t help the total equity situation. For the umpteenth time: yes there are dairy farmers with cash in the bank.
    The big overall figures seem to have blinded you to the fact that there are still some very conservative farmers in NZ, who don’t loan money for anything.
    I would suggest you talk to some of the specialist farm accountants – they see balance sheets that you are not allowing for in your calculations.

  42. Bernard Hickey Says:

    David,
    I’m saying the debt will rise anyway, but the restructure will accelerate it.

    TumTeTum
    Many thanks for your interest. I enjoy a good debate.
    I’d love to see figures, if you have them, on what proportion of production is likely to use spare cash or will sell assets to buy the extra shares rather than take on extra debt. I’ll look out for them too.

    cheers
    Bernard

  43. AndrewJ Says:

    Bernard
    Have you got todays farm debt figures yet?

  44. Iain Parker Says:

    What I make of McLeods recent life choices:
    God damn pilgrims, looks like the law might be thinking about poking its nose in the wildwest, Im taking my booty and gonna get on outa here. Hell, I’ll have to change those tickets to Dubai, second thoughts the central bankers might need a good receiver?

  45. cows 2 Says:

    whilst there is alot of debate about the debt on dairy farms, comentators are failing to note
    1 farmers have worked hard to drop farm working expenses by around 30% this season in Canterbury
    2 farm income has moved up by 30% on original budgets
    3 this means that there are farmers with cash in the current account which is not normal at this time of the year. This is usually the time when overdrafts are at the highest
    4 Farmers have been getting Tax refunds at the moment but my accountant is saying that farmers should be revisiting their tax situation as they might need to start stumping up with more

    I farm in central Canterbury and i do not know of anyone that is looking at buying dry shares and nor do our bankers.

    I think the rise in dairy farm debt will slow right down. Alot of the recent rise was associated with capitilizing overdrafts in June and bankers are not that busy at the moment. Sure there will be farmers that have to do a bit of balance sheet restructuring as in all business sectors

  46. cows2 Says:

    sorry – just noted that there is another chris so will change my above comment about dairying from chris to cows2

  47. Bernard Hickey Says:

    AndrewJ

    RBNZ figures out today show farm lending fell NZ$297 million to NZ$46.934 billion in October from September, but is up 9.9% from NZ$42.687 billion a year ago.
    Here’s the full stats.

    http://rbnz.govt.nz/statistics/monfin/c5/data.html

    cheers
    Bernard

  48. cows2 Says:

    As i said Bernard ” the rise in farm debt is going to slow down”

    Dairy Farmers that are looking at buying dry shares will either have cash in the bank or a lazy Balance Sheet. Rural Lenders are not going to allow an increase in term lending to buy dry shares if they do not have at least 55-60% equity. The new rules are lending to approx $15KG/milksolids so as i say, that is going to count alot of farmers out in buying dry shares.

  49. PeterR Says:

    Assuming two thirds of that growth is dairy debt, which is probably conservative then dairy debt rose around NZ$2.8 billion last year to NZ$31 billion. Those figures would include lending to Fonterra of around NZ$9 billion.

    Those figures do not include lending to Fonterra. Banks have little exposure to Fonterra – only $800 odd million or about half that of a year ago. The result probably of issuing close to $800 million of retail bonds.

    Fonterra’s borrowings are now under $6 billion, mostly offshore notes. The balance of your $9 billion are liabilities to creditors and suppliers.

    Fonterra’s debt to banks would be included under the food manufacturing sector. Claims in the agriculture sector are predominately for farm debt – two thirds dairying.

  50. PeterR Says:

    cows2.

    Dairy Farmers that are looking at buying dry shares will either have cash in the bank or a lazy Balance Sheet.

    I agree, but don’t understand why they might still be considering buying dry shares. That is something you would want other farmers to do, but avoid yourself.

  51. cows2 Says:

    PeterR

    I agree, I wont be unless there is a change in the fundamentals that leads to the yeild going and staying in double figures or the value of the shares going up. Might be a case of wait and see.Anyway I would think if a farmer has spare cash either debt reduction or a bit diversification away from Ag would be the better alternative at the moment.

    The comment by Fonterra today regarding the potential of a fall in the milk price next year is interesting. As the lower milk price will lead to an increase in the value added part of the business, thus resulting in better earnings for holders of wet shares. Is this just a comment to increase the apetite of farmers to buy these shares or just a reflection of the fragile monetary (Dubai!) situation the world still is in.

  52. PeterR Says:

    cows2:

    Is this just a comment to increase the apetite of farmers to buy these shares or just a reflection of the fragile monetary (Dubai!) situation the world still is in.

    I suspect there may be some pressure on Fonterra from their bullish payout forecasts, and this is just a start in softening up shareholders for disappointments to come.

  53. Boris the Frog Says:

    Oh the stories I could tell about goings on a SCF… well it seems that will all have to remain hidden…

    But would I trust Hubbard?

    Nup.

    remember folks… that’s just an opinion.

  54. chip Says:

    Good debate at

    http://www.sharetrader.co.nz/showthread.php?t=2754&page=28

    on SCF ,,,, the sharetrader site never deletes or moderates posts (imho) , despite some fairly ‘grunty’ accusations and revelations being posted.

    Worth reading the SCF thread on sharetrader back to mid June or so , most of what may have been considered ’slanderous / libelous’ by this site has proven to be 100% correct .

    Chip

  55. David Hillary Says:

    while there is not much news about SCf other than the sagas of its borrower’s failed projects being sorted out, I’ve put up a poll on the next big hurdle for SCF: creditwatch — what credit rating will they get?
    see http://davidhillary.blogspot.com/2009/11/credit-rating-countdown-and-poll.html

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