Rural
savings threatened after collapse
THOUSANDS
of farmers and other regional Victorians face a nervous wait after
the collapse last night of the financing group Banksia Securities,
which has put at risk $660 million in savings.
26
October, 2012
Receivers
McGrathNicol took charge of Banksia. It is based in Kyabram in the
state's north and generates the bulk of its business through that
region.
As
a non-bank lender, Banksia offers investors high interest on
debentures and then lends these funds out as mortgages or commercial
property loans.
Given
Banksia does not hold a banking licence, the funds in the debentures
are not backed by a deposit guarantee.
Debenture
firms often target retirees as investors, generating new business
through promises of high-interest returns backed by property.
McGrathNicol
last night froze the $660 million in investments and stopped all
interest payments as it began an urgent review of the company's
accounts.
''We
are at present calculating the value of your investment to the date
of our appointment and will provide those details as soon as
possible,'' McGrathNicol told investors last night.
''At
this early stage, timing and the amount of any dividend is uncertain
and is dependent on the realisation strategy adopted by the receivers
and managers,'' it said.
The
attempt to claw back funds could cause a credit crunch among some
property developers that relied on Banksia for loans.
Big
banks have already warned they are taking a tougher view towards
commercial property lending, particularly as the economy slows.
Banking
major ANZ yesterday warned it had already seen a rise in bad debts in
rural and regional areas, and more pain could be felt if commodity
prices rebounded from recent falls and pushed the Australian dollar
up.
McGrathNicol's
appointment was triggered by Banksia launching a review of its
lending book.
Early
figures from the review presented to the board yesterday indicated a
sharp jump in provisions needed to cover bad loans.
The
steep losses were likely to lead to Banksia having ''negative net
equity'', it told debenture holders ahead of the appointment of
McGrathNicol.
At
the end of June, loans valued at $65 million made by Banksia were
overdue, according to the company's financial accounts. In addition,
it had seized property against which it had lent $74.5 million.
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