Showing posts with label FEG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FEG. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 May 2016

Bruck scrutiny attracts funds from ASIC and FEG

BTT director Philip Bart 
Photo: SiN Images
ASIC and the Department of Employment's (DoE) Active Creditor Program are for the first time simultaneously funding liquidators in a bid to unpick the 2014 restructure of Bruck Textiles Technologies (BTT).

BTT was wound up by a creditors voluntary liquidation (CVL) initiated by its shareholder, Australian Textile Group (ATG) on July 11, 2014. HLB Man Judd's Andrew Needham and Barry Taylor were appointed joint liquidators.

A day earlier, a newly incorporated and related entity, Australian Textile Mills Pty Ltd (ATM), purchased BTT's assets and $11.247 million in net liabilities for $1. The assetless BTT shell was left owing almost $4 million in employee entitlements.

ASIC's head of insolvency practitioner regulation, Adrian Brown told SiN that the government was onto the matter immediately.

"ASIC and the DOE have worked together on the Bruck Textiles matter from the first day of the liquidators' appointment," he told SiN.

"ASIC liaises closely with the DOE concerning its program and our AAF. This way, we can collaborate to determine how best to enforce the law (ASIC's role) and recover FEG (Fair Entitlements Guarantee) advances for the Commonwealth.

Needham and Taylor entered into a funding agreement with ASIC in December 2014 after advising in their August 5, 2014 report to creditors that the BTT directors "may be guilty of an offence under section 596AB of the Corporations Act".

It should be noted that no such finding has been made against BTT's directors. Director and Bruck Group owner Philip James Bart told SiN late last month he had provided all information necessary to demonstrate that the statute had not been breached. He declined to respond to questions submitted in advance of publication, quoting legal advice.

Tuesday, 10 November 2015

Tidbits from the Transcripts - construction inquiry to receive list of suspect liquidators

Senator Doug Cameron will soon have a list of liquidators
connected to repeated construction sector failures.
A list of liquidators of interest is to be delivered to the Senate References Committee's inquiry into insolvency in the construction industry.

At the inquiry's final public hearing in Canberra, senior officials from the Department of Employment told chief inquisitor Senator Doug Cameron how as part of administering the Fair Entitlements Guarantee scheme (FEG), they gathered intelligence about individuals who preside over entities which repeatedly collapse with insufficient assets to pay employee entitlements.

Included in that intelligence are the names of those liquidators who consistently appear as 
the suspect directors' preferred appointees.

"Every six months FEG provides a list of data to ASIC that includes the case names, the amounts paid, the directors' names and the liquidator's names," FEG branch manager Sue Saunders told the inquiry.

"Every six months we provide data to the ATO that is more specific to the phoenixing agenda in the sense that it provides the names of every case and every director where the same director has been listed for more than one case under FEG.

"The information we gather about the cases that become insolvent and leave unpaid employee entitlements to be met under GEERS or FEG is useful intelligence to feed into the other range of information the ATO and ASIC are collecting that builds their risk profile around certain operators in the industry," Saunders said.

Wednesday, 15 July 2015

FEG Scheme to target banks on Section 433

WHILE it's good news that the Department of Employment will fund liquidators' recovery actions against directors and companies where an insolvency has left employee entitlements unpaid, more interesting still is the revelation that banks and receivers are also to be the subject of a renewed focus.

On July 1 the Federal Department of Employment, which administers FEG, or the Fair Entitlements Guarantee Scheme, resurrected the Active Creditor Pilot (ACP) program, phoenix like, after it was shut down without explanation in 2009. The new bird is called the Fair Entitlements Guarantee Recovery Program.

It's architect, Henry Carr is eager to again put money into the pockets of liquidators with strong cases for recovering FEG funds from directors who left companies with unpaid employee obligations. But he's not stopping there.

"One of the issues that is within the scope of the FEG Recovery programme is ensuring that receivers and controllers have fulfilled their statutory duty to pay employee entitlements out of floating charge assets, before paying proceeds of the secured property to their appointer," Carr told SiN.

"In circumstances of a breach of their statutory duties, the receiver/controller may be personally liable to pay damages; or the bank that had knowledge that certain preferential creditors remained unpaid, may be found to hold the proceeds of the charged assets on constructive trust for the Commonwealth," he said.

"Obviously a lot of the insolvency profession look the other way when I bring up this topic but I'm very interested in looking at whether all of the banks have lived up to their obligations in respect of their floating charge assets."

At its core, Carr said the issue is whether a bank can have a fixed charge over highly liquid assets like debtors and cash at bank.