On Monday, the 12th report of the joint liquidators of CL Financial, dated October 20, 2023, was made available.
The document was signed by an attorney for Lex Caribbean and addressed to the Registrar at the Hall of Justice and to Romney Thomas, attorney-at-law at Hobson’s.
The most striking thing about the 12th report of the joint liquidators is that it appears to set a timeline for the divestment of the group’s shares in the insurance company, Clico.
As noted in this space in the October 12 edition of this publication, Clico has 2,950,000 ordinary shares issued and outstanding and three shareholders comprising:
• ↓CL Financial Ltd (in liquidation) with 1,476,171 shares accounting for 50.03 per cent;
• ↓Corporation Sole (Minister of Finance) with 1,450,000 shares accounting for 49.15 per cent; and
• ↓Trustees of CL Financial Ltd with 23,829 shares and 0.807 per cent.
In the report, the joint liquidators note that the Central Bank terminated control of Clico effective December 1, 2023, with control reverting to its three shareholders.
This has meant that the mandate of the insurance company’s board has changed.
“The joint liquidators have been working with GORTT (the other significant shareholder), and the Clico board and management in ascertaining the current status and strategic direction of Clico. On October 10, 2023 the shareholders of Clico elected a new board and chairman.
“It is anticipated that during the next six months a further understanding of Clico’s strategic direction will be developed and following, the joint liquidators will begin the process of selling the company’s majority interest in Clico.”
This indicates that by April 2024, in six months time, the joint liquidators “anticipate” that they will begin the process of selling CL Financial’s majority interest in Clico.
Despite the fact that Clico stopped writing new business with effect from September 1, 2014—and terminated the services of its agents effective September 24, 2014, the insurance company remains profitable, declaring an after-tax profit of $294.01 million in 2022, down 20 per cent from the $367.61 million it reported in 2021.
The company collected $168 million in insurance premiums, while paying out $412.68 million in benefits and claims. Clico’s underwriting loss of $324.55 million was more than compensated by its net results from investing activities of $701.7 million.
Clico also has a very strong balance sheet with total equity of $3.80 billion and assets of $13.09 billion, some 63 per cent ($8.25 billion) of which are Government securities bonds.
But if the joint liquidators “anticipate” that they will begin the process of selling CL Financial’s 50.03 per cent interest in Clico by April 2024, several issues arise:
i) The former executive chair of Clico, Claire Gomez-Miller, in an interview after the October 10 shareholders’ meeting to choose a new board, said the company is ready to start selling new business. “However there is a process that needs to take place, which is the application for a new business licence. When that is completed, Clico should be in a position to sell new products,” said Gomez-Miller.
She also indicated that Clico’s application to sell new business has to wait on the completion of IFRS-17 financial statements comparing 2022 and 2023 financial results.
Question: Will CL Financial sell its majority stake in the insurance company before or after Clico resumes the sale of new business?
ii) On September 30, 2019, Clico executed a sale and purchase agreement with Sagicor Life Inc for the disposal of Clico’s traditional insurance portfolio. The effective date of the transfer is dependent on regulatory approval from the Central Bank, according to Clico’s 2019 audited financial report, which adds, “The sale and purchase agreement contemplate within a period of two years from September 30, 2019 for the transfer to take place.”
Question: Sagicor Financial Company’s current CEO, Andre Mousseau, and its previous CEO, Dodridge Miller, have both said that the Toronto Stock Exchange-listed company is still interested in acquiring Clico’s traditional insurance portfolio. After more than four years, does Sagicor still have a claim on the portfolio?
iii) Maritime Life (Caribbean) Ltd filed an application for leave to make a claim for judicial review of the sale and purchase agreement for the traditional portfolio in November 2019.
Maritime also received a draft order “prohibiting the Central Bank from taking steps to provide regulatory approval or to other wise progress or finalise the transfer of the traditional insurance portfolio” to Sagicor pending the hearing and final determination of this matter. That’s from Clico’s 2022 audited final results.
The Maritime lawsuit went to T&T’s Court of Appeal and the Privy Council, which dismissed the Central Bank’s appeal against the decision of a High Court judge to grant the leave for judicial review.
According to Clico’s 2022 audited financials, which were released in April 2023: “The substantive case of judicial review will now begin.”
Question: Will Maritime’s lawsuit against the Central Bank impact on the sale of CL Financial’s 50.03 per cent stake in Clico?
iv) In January and February 2023, Clico offered to sell 19.63 per cent of Methanol Holdings International Ltd to Corporation Sole and 17 per cent of MHIL to the National Investment Fund (NIF), an investment holding company that is 100-per cent owned by Corporation Sole.
In April, Minister in the Ministry of Finance, Brian Manning said: “To date, Clico has signed share acquisition agreements and share transfer forms with the Government of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago and NIF. But the share register of MHIL has not yet been amended to reflect the transfers.”
Question: Will the apparent legal squabble between the Government and Switzerland-based Proman over the transfer of some of Clico’s shares in MHIL shares (it plans to retain just under 20 per cent) to Corporation Sole impact on the sale of CL Financial shares in the insurer?
v) In their 12th report, the joint liquidators of CL Financial placed the group’s liabilities to unsecured creditors at between $16.93 billion and $22.69 billion.
The total estimated realisation of the sale of the group’s assets was placed at between $3.24 and $6.24 billion. That suggests that unsecured creditors of CL Financial will be required to take a haircut.
Question: Is CL Financial’s debt to Corporation Sole, which an October 17 Guardian editorial estimated at over $8 billion, included among the unsecured creditors of the group?
Lawrence Duprey in 2008
In researching CL Financial, reference was made to the group’s 2007 annual report, which is important for the following reasons:
In his chairman’s letter to the CL Financial shareholders, which was probably drafted in November 2018, the group’s chairman, Lawrence Duprey, said he was addressing the letter “at a time of extreme financial turbulence,” in which the US sub-prime mortgage crisis had “morphed into the most serious financial crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930’s.
Duprey added that “many people fear that the economic consequences of the current global financial crisis could last 12-24 months and create conditions similar to the Great Depression.
“I do not share this view. The world today is very different from the 1930s. Governments and businesses have learned from the mistakes of the past, and we have learned from each other’s experiences...
“Across the world, central banks have injected extraordinary amounts of liquidity into economies; governments have arranged the takeover of key financial institutions to guarantee all deposits.”
I think these are extraordinary words for the chairman of a company to have written three months before the group’s collapse.