Sandy Maier for Hubbard's CEO role
BUSINESSWIRE
Relevant offers
Banking & Finance
South Canterbury Finance, whose shareholder was forced to inject funds and underwrite bad loans last year, has named statutory management veteran Sandy Maier as chief executive.
Maier's role will include overseeing the group's loan portfolio and advising the board on South Canterbury's recapitalisation, it said in a statement today.
The finance company controlled by Allan Hubbard posted a net loss of $69 million in the year ended June 30 after taking provisions against non-performing assets such as property loans.
It was forced to negotiate repayment terms with a group of U.S. investors after losing its investment grade credit rating.
Maier has been hired under a consultancy agreement with Hubbard's Southbury Group and will be CEO of both the group and South Canterbury, the company said.
He replaces Nigel Gormack, who became acting CEO when former chief Lachie McLeod left at the end of November.
He is chairman of state-owned Learning Media, Radius Property, Pathfinder Asset Management and Oyster Bay Marlborough Vineyards.
He was a statutory manager of Development Finance Corp. in 1990-1992, assuming responsibility for the financing body that failed in 1989 amid loan loss provisions, having pursued an aggressive approach to lending.
Last week, S&P affirmed South Canterbury's BB+ rating, saying the outlook was 'negative.' S&P cited the company's access to debenture funding, new independent directors and clean financial statements.
South Canterbury's liquidity and asset quality remained weak for the current rating and the firm is only in the early stages of addressing concerns about related-party investments, S&P said.
Twelve months of change
Sandy Maier, who has been tapped for the role of chief executive in businessman Allan Hubbard's investment group, says he is being brought in as a change manager with a set of tasks to be achieved over the next 12 months.
Maier has been appointed CEO of Hubbard's Southbury Group and will also become chief of South Canterbury Finance under a consultancy agreement with the parent.
The job will include overseeing the group's loan portfolio and advising the board on South Canterbury's recapitalisation, the firm said in a statement today.
"The assignment is really focused in this coming year," Maier told BusinessWire. "This year it has been difficult for all finance companies" and for South Canterbury and Southbury "there are a number of short-term financial tasks to do."
Maier's experience includes being a statutory manager of Development Finance Corp. in 1990-1992, assuming responsibility for the financing body that failed in 1989 amid loan loss provisions, having pursued an aggressive approach to lending.
He wouldn't speculate on how long the role would extend beyond 2010.
Hubbard was forced to inject funds into South Canterbury and underwrite bad loans in 2009.
The finance company posted a net loss of $69 million in the year ended June 30 after taking provisions against non-performing assets such as property loans.
It was forced to negotiate repayment terms with a group of U.S. investors after losing its investment grade credit rating.
Maier replaces Nigel Gormack, who became acting CEO when former chief Lachie McLeod left at the end of November.
He is chairman of state-owned Learning Media, Radius Property, Pathfinder Asset Management and Oyster Bay Marlborough Vineyards.
He says his role as chairman of GEON, the Australasian printing group, keeps him most busy currently and he will have to review his other commitments having taken on the Southbury Group role.
Sponsored links
Upgrade of laws to aid at-risk consumers
Prospectors bid to water down drilling legislation
Banking on return of blue magic
Fay aims shot at OIO over Crafar
ANZ National bides time over merger plans
'Years' to settle logo patent bid
Telco keeps Christchurch options open
Former All Black Sione Lauaki's health scare
Small boat explodes in Auckland bay
Arsons in Christchurch, New Plymouth
Anger at Holmes' Waitangi remarks
Phoenix slip to third in tight playoffs race
Sunshine Coast Eagles no match for Warriors
Black Caps out to keep pressure on Proteas
Local content steady on the box
Time may be right to expand Super Rugby
Anger at Holmes' Waitangi remarks
Lawyer faces impropriety allegations
Oliver's army set to roll into NZ
North-South split on where to rebuild Christchurch
Daily trivia quiz: February 19
Women prisoners cost much more to lock up
Clock ticking for Transmission Gully process
Brothel scares and stresses neighbourhood
Fear of dangerous rift from wealth gap
Bid to scrap race relations office
Restorative justice goes to school
Mallard case raises questions of behaviour
One year on too soon to shake raw feelings