INDEPENDENT NEWS

NZX minnows NZF, Vetilot fined, censured over late filings

Published: Mon 20 Jan 2014 10:28 AM
NZX minnows NZF, Vetilot fined, censured over late filings
By Paul McBeth
Jan. 20 (BusinessDesk) - NZX minnows Vetilot and NZF Group have been fined and censured by the stock market operator’s disciplinary arm over the late filings of their respective annual reports.
NZAX-listed Vetilot, which was formerly Investment Research Group and is now a shell company, was ordered to pay $40,000 and costs, and publicly censured for failing to file its 2013 annual report by July 31 last year, leading to a week-long suspension in August, NZX’s disciplinary tribunal said in a statement on Friday after the close of trading. The fine would have been higher had the breach been longer and the company been larger, the regulator said.
“The Tribunal was dismayed to find the company in breach of Rule 10.5.1 for a second time in a relatively short period - with VET (or IRG as it then was) having already been the subject of disciplinary action by the Tribunal for breaches of obligations under the Rule with respect to the periodic reporting in March 2011,” the tribunal said. “It is completely unsatisfactory that VET has again failed to release its annual report when due.”
Vetilot’s repeated breach raised an issue for the tribunal as to how the NZX should respond to serial offending, and recommended the stock market operator should consider whether a pattern of behaviour should spark other remedial action.
“The Tribunal also suggests that the drivers for taking such a proactive approach are, if anything, amplified in the case of ‘shell’ companies,” it said. “Specifically, it is important that need for compliance must be actively encouraged not only to ensure market integrity but also to maintain another mechanisms for businesses to list without the cost of an IPO.”
In a separate notice today, the tribunal said financial services group NZF will be fined $35,000 and publicly censured after settling with the disciplinary board after failing to file its 2013 annual report, leading to four-and-a-half month trading suspension last year.
The aggravating factors in the NZF case were the four-and-a-half month delay in releasing the annual report, and that NZF failed to meet its earlier guidance on when it would release the statements.
(BusinessDesk)

Next in Business, Science, and Tech

Ship Anchors May Cause Extensive And Long-lasting Damage To The Seafloor, According To New NIWA Research
By: NIWA
A Step Forward For Simpler Trade Between New Zealand And Singapore
By: New Zealand Customs Service
68% Say Make Banks Offer Fraud Protection
By: Horizon Research Limited
Banks Seek Government Support For Anti-Scam Centre
By: NZ Banking Association
National Road Carriers Praises NZTA State Highway Investment Proposal Turnaround
By: National Road Carriers
Cameras Reveal Mass Underreporting Of Dolphin, Albatross And Fish Bycatch By Commercial Fishing Industry
By: Greenpeace
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media