CBL to exit problematic French unit, takes action against SFS vendors
By Paul McBeth
Feb. 14 (BusinessDesk) - CBL Corp is hiring advisers to sell the French construction insurance division that's seen it
fall foul of regulators over solvency concerns and is pursuing legal action against the vendors of Securities and
Financial Solutions Europe SA (SFS).
The Auckland-based credit surety and financial insurance risk firm expects to exit the French business within 90 days
after a board-led strategic review found the high level of capital needed to meet estimated future claims posed "a
disproportionate level of risk for the wider business", it said in a statement. CBL said the French unit is profitable
and all options are on the table, including the sale of the insurance book, and the distribution and operational
networks of the managing general agents as a going concern.
The insurer said it has triggered legal rights against the vendors of SFS under the purchase agreement, and that
alongside other remedies it has recourse to $40 million to recover against its balance sheet. CBL bought SFS for 94.5
million euro through cash, bank debt and vendor funding, and retained executive chair and shareholder Antoine Guiget
while the principal shareholder Patrice Gilles exited and became an advisory chair to the unit.
"The board considers this exit of the French Construction Business to be a significant and positive decision made in the
interests of ensuring CBL’s long-term growth and profitability," it said. "This will enable the business to move forward
with CBL’s core business lines which have continued to perform strongly during 2017."
CBL's stock has been suspended from trading on the NZX as the stock market operator tries to work out whether it's kept
the market informed of material information and met continuous disclosure obligations. Trading in the stock was halted
before the suspension with details eked out over subsequent days that prudential regulators in New Zealand and abroad
questioned the adequacy of reserves for its French construction insurance division, prompting a credit rating downgrade
and prospective capital raise.
The insurer has said this week that it will need a couple of weeks to finalise a capital raising and today said the
details are still being worked out with more information to come.
CBL will stop writing new French construction business from April and all renewals will end from June.
The company still expects to report annual earnings on Feb. 27, having issued a profit warning earlier this month that
it posted a loss of between $75 million and $85 million in calendar 2017. CBL said it would need to make a $100 million
adjustment to strengthen the future claims reserve for the French construction unit, of which $10 million would fall in
2017, and would write off $44 million of receivables from broker/insurer/reinsurer reconciliations and differences after
the SFS acquisition.
The stock last traded on the NZX at $3.17 before being suspended last week, more than twice the $1.55 price the shares
were sold at in an initial public offering in late 2015.
(BusinessDesk)