More
jobs gloom as engineering firm collapses
UPDATE
MORE
than 2000 jobs will be axed after embattled engineering company
Hastie collapsed under an estimated $500 million of debt
28
May, 2012
In
a major blow to the Gillard government, most of the job losses will
come in the economically troubled states of New South Wales and
Victoria.
BusinessDay
believes up to 1300 Hastie Group staff in the two states will be told
today they no longer have work.
The
south-eastern states have borne the brunt of recent job losses in
Australia, with Qantas last week axing 500 engineering jobs from its
heavy maintenance division, the majority at Tullamarine. News Limited
is also days away from announcing major job cuts as it restructures
its largely print-based publishing business, with up to 400 editorial
jobs set to go, while Caltex has flagged it might shut down its two
Australian oil refineries in the next year.
News
of the collapse of Hastie Group - the nation's biggest provider of
airconditioning and refrigeration systems for office towers,
apartment blocks and hospitals - comes on the eve of a Labor caucus
meeting in Canberra at which jobs will be high on the agenda.
On
Friday, Hastie Group non-executive directors Lindsay Phillips and
Harry Boon quit after a $20 million ''accounting irregularity''
emerged in the books of one of the company's Queensland divisions.
That came as Hastie was in negotiations with its banks over a
refinancing deal.
All
four of Australia's major banks form part of an international
syndicate that has lent $500 million to Hastie. ANZ is believed to
have the biggest exposure, and is owed an estimated $150 million.
At
the weekend, Hastie Group executives met advisers from corporate
reconstruction specialist PPB, but last-ditchattempts
to revive the recapitalisation failed. Early yesterday, the board
decided to appoint PPB as administrator and McGrathNicol as receiver
of the company. Both firms will be officially appointed today.
After
announcing a $150 million December-half loss, Hastie Group's ASX
market value plunged to just $21 million before the company was put
in a trading halt on April 13 and suspended from trading four days
later. That was the result of a dispute over alleged unfair payment
of ''performance bonds'' to a builder in the Middle East.
The
company has reported the $20 million accounting discrepancy to the
Australian Securities and Investments Commission.
Hastie
is a conglomeration of more than 50 business units across Australia,
New Zealand and Britain. Some of its profitable units will continue
to operate, as will crucial business units that provide maintenance
services to hospitals and apartment blocks.
Hastie's
collapse to hit banks
AUSTRALIA'S
big four banks are facing write-downs totalling almost $250 million
in the wake of Hastie Group's collapse into receivership at the
weekend
28
May, 2012
ANZ
is the lead lender in a consortium of banks that includes
Commonwealth Bank, National Australia Bank, Westpac, ANZ , Bank of
Scotland, Ulster Bank, HSBC Australia and HSBC Middle East.
That
syndicate is owed an estimated $500 million, according to sources
close to weekend negotiations over Hastie's future.
The
debt is believed to be a 50:50 split between loans and bonds.
In
total, ANZ is believed to be owed $150 million. Commonwealth Bank,
with $20 million, has the smallest exposure of the Australian banks.
''The other two, Westpac and NAB, fall somewhere in between,''
BusinessDay was told by a source close to the negotiations yesterday.
The
corporate regulator is now assessing claims that a $20 million
''accounting irregularity'' is in the books of one of Hastie's
Queensland divisions. Discovery of that $20 million black hole
scuttled a refinancing deal with the banks.
''We've
sent the matter to ASIC,'' chief executive Bill Wild said on Friday.
''We'll go step-by-step. We're still working on it.''
In
the wake of Hastie's $150 million December-half loss, and a share
price that has plunged from $2.17 to just 16¢ in the past year, that
accounting irregularity is worth almost as much as Hastie's entire
$21 million market capitalisation
For
article GO HERE
Stocks
poised to extend retreat
Australian
shares are poised to extend losses to a fourth day as worries about
Europe continue to weigh on global markets, placing them on course
for their worst month since the depth of the financial crisis
SMH,
28
May, 2012
Australian
share futures were down 13 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 4018. The
ASX200 closed at its lowest level in almost six months on Friday,
losing 26.6 points on the day, or 0.7 per cent, to 4029.2. The All
Ordinaries fell 25 points, to 0.6 per cent, to 4081.2.
Companies
in focus
Local
construction companies may be a focus of the market today after
another firm in the industry, Hastie Group, collapsed into
receivorship over the weekend.
Media
companies may also examined closely by investors, with News Corp.
expected to announce the loss of as many as 400 editorial jobs as the
firm adjusts to weaker advertising revenue.
Qantas
may also be active after Deutsche Bank speculated that rival Emirates
may invest directly into the Australian carrier's domestic
operations.
Deutsche
Bank, meanwhile, raised its recommendation to "buy" for
Mondelphous Group and Fortescue Metals.
In
local economic news today, Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens is to
address the Australian Payments Clearing Association’s 20th
Anniversary Symposium in Sydney. National Australia Bank is due to
release its quarterly online retail sales index.
May
losses
Australian
shares are down almost 9 per cent in May, the worst monthly return
since markets shed more than 12 per cent in October 2008 when US
investment bank Lehman Brothers collapsed.
The
losses for the month so far total about $115 billion.
This
week investors will keep a close eye on a raft of data being released
locally and overseas, including an Irish referendum on a European
fiscal pact on Thursday and US jobs numbers on Friday.
Australian
retail sales figures will be released on Wednesday, with risks to the
downside after a bounce in March.
On
Thursday, relatively weak building approvals figures will be released
after a lift last month.
The
RP Data Rismark house price index will be released on Friday.
Spain
pain
Another
flare-up in Europe's debt crisis knocked US markets lower on Friday
as Spanish bank Bankia hoped for a major bailout.
"In
the absence of any more weekend stimulus announcements out of China,
futures point to a softish open for the Australian share market,"
said AMP Capital Markets head of strategy Shane Oliver.
Despite
a better consumer outlook in the US, investors were still worried
about Spanish banks and the possibility of Greece leaving the
eurozone.
Meanwhile,
the new president of Spain's fourth-biggest bank, Bankia, was
confident of receiving 23.5 billion euros ($A30.4 billion) from the
government in the largest bank bailout in the country's history.
The
Spanish government aid includes the 4.5 billion euros ($A5.82
billion) already tipped into Bankia after the lender was partially
nationalised earlier this month.
Global
markets
LONDON
- The euro briefly dipped below $1.25 but European stocks firmed
despite dark clouds lingering over the eurozone with concerns that
problems at Spanish banks could turn into a full-blown crisis.
Trade
was choppy throughout the session but took a final turn higher on
news Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti had invited French, Spanish
and German leaders to a four-way summit after key Greek elections in
June.
At
close London’s benchmark FTSE 100 index inched up 0.03 per cent to
5,351.53 points, while Frankfurt’s DAX 30 gained 0.38 per cent to
6,339.94 points and in Paris the CAC 40 rose 0.32 per cent to
3,047.94 points.
Madrid
gained 0.13 per cent to 6,543 points even though lender Bankia
earlier asked to be suspended from trading on reports saying the bank
may seek up to 20 billion euros from the state to stay afloat.
HONG
KONG - Asian markets closed mixed as weak European data added to
pessimism after this week’s disappointing summit on saving Greece
from leaving the eurozone.
Positive
leads from Wall Street and European markets were unable to provide a
thrust as Asian indexes which in the past month have given up the
gains made since the start of the year.
Tokyo
closed up 0.20 per cent, or 17.01 points, to 8580.39, while Seoul was
0.53 per cent, or 9.7 points, higher at 1824.17.
Hong
Kong ended 0.25 per cent, or 47.01 points higher at 18,713.41 and
Shanghai was down 0.74 per cent, or 17.42 points, at 2333.55.
UPDATE
Hundreds
of Hastie staff stood down by SMS
German
solar power plants produced a world record 22 gigawatts of
electricity per hour - equal to 20 nuclear power stations at full
capacity - through the midday hours on Friday and Saturday, the head
of a renewable energy think tank said
28
May, 2012
Hundreds
of Victorian workers are receiving text messages this morning saying
they have been stood down without pay after the embattled engineering
company Hastie collapsed under an estimated $500 million debt.
Electrical
Trades Union state secretary Dean Mighell said many of the 500
workers his union represents in Victoria and South Australia were on
an industry-rostered day off today and were informed this morning via
text message that the NSW-based company had been placed into
voluntary administration.
In
a further blow, the workers have been stood down without pay for 28
days, meaning they cannot access unemployment benefits or redundancy
funds because technically they are still employed for that period, Mr
Mighell said.
"The
reality of losing their job is bad, only made worse because they
can't get access to any unemployment benefits or their redundancy
because the administrators said that they are technically still
employed while not getting paid for 28 days," said Mr Mighell,
who met the administrators this morning.
"They
[Hastie] say there is a 28-day process they have to go through, and
they're saying unofficially that they [his members] will be
terminated after that process."
Mr
Mighell said he was heading to Canberra this afternoon to discuss the
situation with Workplace Relations Minister Bill Shorten.
The
union will also hold a mass meeting for its members at its Arden
Street headquarters in North Melbourne at 10am tomorrow.
Mr
Mighell said he believed up to 3000 people were set to lose their
jobs across the country, including 500 of his members across Victoria
and South Australia who are employed across the Hastie Group to do
plumbing, electrical work and mechanical engineering.
"It's
a very dark day. It's a very dark day for jobs and a very dark day
for thousands of workers in this country. Through no fault of their
own they've lost their jobs," Mr Mighell said.
"They
can resign and get work with other companies, but in Victoria ...
there isn't much work around so the job prospects are really bad."
He
said the expected job cuts came as Gina Rinehart was granted an
enterprise migration agreement, enabling her company, Hancock
Prospecting, to import 1715 workers to help build the $9.5 billion
Roy Hill iron ore project in the Pilbara.
"Meanwhile
we've got tradesmen in Victoria staring down the barrel of long-term
unemployment and just can't get a start," he said.
"I'm
off to Canberra this afternoon to have a chat to Bill Shorten just to
see if there's not anything he can do in order to free up these
workers and their employment status."
The
Australian Manufacturing Workers Union has also been contacted for
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