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#11481 Tom

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 06:10 PM

A company voluntary arrangement (CVA) Potential benefits:
Companies can benefit from a CVA in numerous ways:
 
Improves cash flow, quickly.
Stops pressure from tax while the CVA is being prepared.
Stops a winding-up petition and gets it adjourned.
Can rapidly cut costs.
Can terminate employment, leases and onerous supply contracts.
Terminates property lease obligations.
Terminates directors’ and/or managers’ contracts.
Removes employees with no redundancy payments or lieu-of-notice costs.
Terminates onerous customer/supplier contracts.
Board and shareholders generally remain in control of the company.
Has much lower costs than administration and is not publicly announced like administration is.
Is a good deal for creditors as they retain the customer and receive some of their debt back over time.

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#11482 Lionelza1

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 06:10 PM

Haha Friday another sens issue.... But jussis this thing got pomped b4 the sens

Hopefully it close on high on tradegate.... What u guys think?
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#11483 Tom

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 05:56 PM

Steinhoff – Issue of proposals in connection with company voluntary arrangements for SEAG
and SFHG prior to creditors’ meetings scheduled for 14 December 2018
Steinhoff International Holdings N.V. (the “Company” and with its subsidiaries, the “Group”).

The Company refers to its announcements of 19 November 2018 (the “19 November
Announcements”) in respect of the issue of a company voluntary arrangement in relation
to Steinhoff Europe AG (“SEAG”) (the “SEAG CVA Proposal”) and a consent solicitation
process by the Company in respect of convertible bonds issued by Steinhoff Finance
Holding GmbH (“SFHG”), (the “Consent Solicitations”).

Further to the 19 November Announcements, the Company is pleased to provide an
update on the restructuring of the Group’s financial indebtedness and, in particular, to
provide an update on the issue of the SEAG CVA Proposal and announce the issue of the
SFHG CVA Proposal (following the withdrawal of the Consent Solicitations as detailed
below).

These processes relate to the restructuring of debt at SEAG and SFHG and are not expected
to have any impact on any of the Group’s operating businesses, their landlords or trade
creditors.

Withdrawal of Consent Solicitations in favour of a company voluntary arrangement of SFHG

The Company has terminated the Consent Solicitations and withdrawn the extraordinary
resolutions in respect of the three series of outstanding SFHG issued convertible bonds due
2021, 2022 and 2023 (the “Convertible Bonds”), as it has determined that the restructuring
of the Convertible Bonds will be more effectively achieved by way of a company voluntary
arrangement of SFHG under Part 1 of the Insolvency Act 1986 (the “SFHG CVA Proposal”).

The SFHG CVA Proposal has been made to Alan Bloom, Alan Hudson and Simon Edel of
Ernst & Young, who have consented to act as nominees for both the SFHG CVA Proposal
and the SEAG CVA Proposal (the “Nominees”).

Issue of the SEAG CVA Proposal and the SFHG CVA Proposal
The Company understands that the Nominees have reviewed and considered the SEAG
CVA Proposal and SFHG CVA Proposal (together the “Proposals”) and today issued a report
to the High Court of England and Wales in respect of each of the Proposals.

The Nominees’ reports having been filed at the High Court, today the SEAG CVA Proposal
is being published to all creditors of SEAG and the SFHG CVA Proposal is being published to
all creditors of SFHG. Creditors of SEAG and SFHG will now have a period of time to review
and consider the SEAG CVA Proposal and the SFHG CVA Proposal respectively, before
voting at the creditors’ meetings to be held on 14 December 2018.

A requirement in respect of each of the SEAG CVA Proposal and SFHG CVA Proposal is that
completion of both company voluntary arrangements will be inter-conditional with each
other.

Key aspects of the SEAG CVA Proposal:

The SEAG CVA Proposal includes the following key aspects:

• the corporate holding structure of SEAG will be restructured with the incorporation of
new Luxembourg, Jersey and UK incorporated companies as direct and indirect
holding companies and subsidiaries of SEAG;
• at closing, there will be a hive-down of almost all of the assets and liabilities from SEAG
to certain of these newly incorporated Jersey and UK companies;
• SEAG’s existing financial indebtedness will be restructured by way of a new term loan
facility to be issued by a newly incorporated Luxembourg company which shall sit as
an indirect subsidiary of SEAG (the “New SEAG Luxco Debt”). The New SEAG Luxco Debt
shall accrue PIK interest which shall capitalize on a semi-annual basis and the facility
shall mature on 31 December 2021;
• SEAG’s existing financial creditors will be able to participate in the New SEAG Luxco
Debt, such participations to have the benefit of a security package to be granted by
the new SEAG corporate group;
• to the extent that SEAG’s existing financial creditors currently benefit from a guarantee
from the Company in respect of their holding of existing SEAG debt, such financial
creditors will also receive the benefit of a new deferred contingent payment instrument
to be provided by the Company in respect of the New SEAG Luxco Debt; and
• to facilitate completion of the financial restructuring, an interim moratorium will, subject
to approval by SEAG’s creditors of the SEAG CVA Proposal, come into force from the
date of such approval and will have the effect that SEAG’s creditors will be prohibited
from taking certain enforcement action against SEAG from such date until the
implementation of the financial restructuring or the termination of the CVA.

Further information is contained in the SEAG CVA Proposal which includes an anticipated
timetable and instructions for SEAG creditors on the actions which they will need to take.
The SEAG CVA proposal, together with certain supporting documentation, can be
downloaded free of charge at www.lucid-is.com/steinhoff.

Key aspects of the SFHG CVA Proposal

The SFHG CVA Proposal includes the following key aspects:
• the restructuring of the Convertible Bonds as indebtedness in the form of guaranteed
secured loans to mature on 31 December 2021 and which shall accrue PIK interest
which shall capitalize on a semi-annual basis. It is proposed that the loans so extended
by holders of the Convertible Bonds due 2021 and 2022 would be restructured into a
single loan facility and that the loans so extended by the holders of the Convertible
Bonds due 2023 would be restructured into a separate loan facility, each with a new
Luxembourg incorporated entity as the borrower. The 2021/2022 and the 2023 loan
facilities will rank pari passu at borrower level;
• these loan facilities will benefit from either a guarantee or deferred contingent payment
instruments from, in the case of the 2021/2022 loan facility, the Company and Steinhoff
International Holdings Pty Ltd and in the case of the 2023 loan facility, the Company,
reflecting the guarantor structure in relation to each existing series of Convertible Bonds;
• the new restructured indebtedness will take the form of private loan facilities and the
convertible feature of the existing Convertible Bonds will be removed; and
• to facilitate completion of the financial restructuring, an interim moratorium will, subject
to approval of SFHG’s creditors of the SFHG CVA Proposal, come into force from the
date of such approval and will have the effect that SFHG’s creditors will be prohibited
from taking certain enforcement action against SFHG or the Company from such date
until the implementation of the financial restructuring or the termination of the SFHG
CVA Proposal.

Further information is contained in the SFHG CVA Proposal which includes an anticipated
timetable and instructions for SFHG creditors on the actions which they will need to take.
The SFHG CVA proposal, together with certain supporting documentation, can be
downloaded free of charge at www.lucid-is.com/steinhoff.

Shareholders and other investors in the Company are advised to exercise caution when
dealing in the securities of the Group.


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#11484 DayTraderDad

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 05:56 PM

Looks like it was to buy the big sell order that they noticed  at day lowest price.

Steinhoff - Issue of proposals in connection with company voluntary arrangements for SEAG and SFHG prior to creditors' meetings scheduled for 14 December 2018
 
Steinhoff International Holdings N.V. (the "Company" and with its subsidiaries, the "Group").
 
The Company refers to its announcements of 19 November 2018 (the "19 November Announcements") in respect of the issue of a company voluntary arrangement in relation to Steinhoff Europe AG ("SEAG") (the "SEAG CVA Proposal") and a consent solicitation process by the Company in respect of convertible bonds issued by Steinhoff Finance Holding GmbH ("SFHG"), (the "Consent Solicitations").
 
Further to the 19 November Announcements, the Company is pleased to provide an update on the restructuring of the Group's financial indebtedness and, in particular, to provide an update on the issue of the SEAG CVA Proposal and announce the issue of the SFHG CVA Proposal (following the withdrawal of the Consent Solicitations as detailed below).
 
These processes relate to the restructuring of debt at SEAG and SFHG and are not expected to have any impact on any of the Group's operating businesses, their landlords or trade creditors.
 
Withdrawal of Consent Solicitations in favour of a company voluntary arrangement of SFHG
 
The Company has terminated the Consent Solicitations and withdrawn the extraordinary resolutions in respect of the three series of outstanding SFHG issued convertible bonds due 2021, 2022 and 2023 (the "Convertible Bonds"), as it has determined that the restructuring of the Convertible Bonds will be more effectively achieved by way of a company voluntary arrangement of SFHG under Part 1 of the Insolvency Act 1986 (the "SFHG CVA Proposal").
 
The SFHG CVA Proposal has been made to Alan Bloom, Alan Hudson and Simon Edel of Ernst & Young, who have consented to act as nominees for both the SFHG CVA Proposal and the SEAG CVA Proposal (the "Nominees").
 
Issue of the SEAG CVA Proposal and the SFHG CVA Proposal
 
The Company understands that the Nominees have reviewed and considered the SEAG CVA Proposal and SFHG CVA Proposal (together the "Proposals") and today issued a report to the High Court of England and Wales in respect of each of the Proposals.
 
The Nominees' reports having been filed at the High Court, today the SEAG CVA Proposal is being published to all creditors of SEAG and the SFHG CVA Proposal is being published to all creditors of SFHG. Creditors of SEAG and SFHG will now have a period of time to review and consider the SEAG CVA Proposal and the SFHG CVA Proposal respectively, before voting at the creditors' meetings to be held on 14 December 2018.
 
A requirement in respect of each of the SEAG CVA Proposal and SFHG CVA Proposal is that completion of both company voluntary arrangements will be inter-conditional with each other.
 
Key aspects of the SEAG CVA Proposal:
 
The SEAG CVA Proposal includes the following key aspects:
 
- the corporate holding structure of SEAG will be restructured with the incorporation of new Luxembourg, Jersey and UK incorporated companies as direct and indirect holding companies and subsidiaries of SEAG;
 
- at closing, there will be a hive-down of almost all of the assets and liabilities from SEAG to certain of these newly incorporated Jersey and UK companies;
 
- SEAG's existing financial indebtedness will be restructured by way of a new term loan facility to be issued by a newly incorporated Luxembourg company which shall sit as an indirect subsidiary of SEAG (the "New SEAG Luxco Debt"). The New SEAG Luxco Debt shall accrue PIK interest which shall capitalize on a semi-annual basis and the facility shall mature on 31 December 2021;
 
- SEAG's existing financial creditors will be able to participate in the New SEAG Luxco Debt, such participations to have the benefit of a security package to be granted by the new SEAG corporate group;
 
- to the extent that SEAG's existing financial creditors currently benefit from a guarantee from the Company in respect of their holding of existing SEAG debt, such financial creditors will also receive the benefit of a new deferred contingent payment instrument to be provided by the Company in respect of the New SEAG Luxco Debt; and
 
- to facilitate completion of the financial restructuring, an interim moratorium will, subject to approval by SEAG's creditors of the SEAG CVA Proposal, come into force from the date of such approval and will have the effect that SEAG's creditors will be prohibited from taking certain enforcement action against SEAG from such date until the implementation of the financial restructuring or the termination of the CVA.
 
Further information is contained in the SEAG CVA Proposal which includes an anticipated timetable and instructions for SEAG creditors on the actions which they will need to take. The SEAG CVA proposal, together with certain supporting documentation, can be downloaded free of charge at www.lucid-is.com/steinhoff.
 
Key aspects of the SFHG CVA Proposal
 
The SFHG CVA Proposal includes the following key aspects:
 
- the restructuring of the Convertible Bonds as indebtedness in the form of guaranteed secured loans to mature on 31 December 2021 and which shall accrue PIK interest which shall capitalize on a semi-annual basis. It is proposed that the loans so extended by holders of the Convertible Bonds due 2021 and 2022 would be restructured into a single loan facility and that the loans so extended by the holders of the Convertible Bonds due 2023 would be restructured into a separate loan facility, each with a new Luxembourg incorporated entity as the borrower. The 2021/2022 and the 2023 loan facilities will rank pari passu at borrower level;
 
- these loan facilities will benefit from either a guarantee or deferred contingent payment instruments from, in the case of the 2021/2022 loan facility, the Company and Steinhoff International Holdings Pty Ltd and in the case of the 2023 loan facility, the Company, reflecting the guarantor structure in relation to each existing series of Convertible Bonds;
 
- the new restructured indebtedness will take the form of private loan facilities and the convertible feature of the existing Convertible Bonds will be removed; and
 
- to facilitate completion of the financial restructuring, an interim moratorium will, subject to approval of SFHG's creditors of the SFHG CVA Proposal, come into force from the date of such approval and will have the effect that SFHG's creditors will be prohibited from taking certain enforcement action against SFHG or the Company from such date until the implementation of the financial restructuring or the termination of the SFHG CVA Proposal.
 
Further information is contained in the SFHG CVA Proposal which includes an anticipated timetable and instructions for SFHG creditors on the actions which they will need to take. The SFHG CVA proposal, together with certain supporting documentation, can be downloaded free of charge at www.lucid-is.com/steinhoff.
 
Shareholders and other investors in the Company are advised to exercise caution when dealing in the securities of the Group.
 
Stellenbosch, 30 November 2018

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#11485 Tom

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 05:47 PM

big buy orders 5 mil shares at 1.78

Looks like it was to buy the big sell order that they noticed  at day lowest price.


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#11486 DayTraderDad

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 05:39 PM

Yes something has leaked and we as investor will be the last ones to know!!!

big buy orders 5 mil shares at 1.78


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#11487 DayTraderDad

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 05:37 PM

Any reason for the big sale?

Yes something has leaked and we as investor will be the last ones to know!!!


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#11488 Tom

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 05:19 PM

Any reason for the big sale?


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#11489 DayTraderDad

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 04:11 PM

Pepkor has paid all its group internal debt back to SNH, but most other subsidiaries do carry internal group debt back to Steinhoff, so Steinhoff also have the option to offer any entity a share (say 49%) in those subsidiaries in exchange for them to carry the burden of paying 49% of the debt due back to Steinhoff, so Steinhoff becomes the creditor (not the debtor), (so half of the debt is outsourced),  they have done this already in Mattress Firm case.

I do think it's always a good idea to sell any business they have should they get a good price for it (but not for a bad price).

Well said Tom I agree


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#11490 Tom

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 04:00 PM

Yes that sounds good but SNH will have to reduce the debt it cannot service all that debt at 10% interest.

Pepkor has paid all its group internal debt back to SNH, but most other subsidiaries do carry internal group debt back to Steinhoff, so Steinhoff also have the option to offer any entity a share (say 49%) in those subsidiaries in exchange for them to carry the burden of paying 49% of the debt due back to Steinhoff, so Steinhoff becomes the creditor (not the debtor), (so half of the debt is outsourced),  they have done this already in Mattress Firm case.

I do think it's always a good idea to sell any business they have should they get a good price for it (but not for a bad price).


Edited by Tom, 30 November 2018 - 04:04 PM.

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#11491 Bubble

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 03:51 PM

According to the last statement from the CEO of Pepkor Naido that Steinhoff might not be selling more assets in order to reduce the debt, and might be considering to just continue with it's business operations and also expanding, while servicing the debt.

I think he referred to SNH not being able to sell the +-71% shareholding in Pepkor, other asset sales is still ongoing.


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#11492 DayTraderDad

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 03:41 PM

According to the last statement from the CEO of Pepkor Naido that Steinhoff might not be selling more assets in order to reduce the debt, and might be considering to just continue with it's business operations and also expanding, while servicing the debt.

Yes that sounds good but SNH will have to reduce the debt it cannot service all that debt at 10% interest.


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#11493 Tom

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 03:03 PM

According to the last statement from the CEO of Pepkor Naido that Steinhoff might not be selling more assets in order to reduce the debt, and might be considering to just continue with it's business operations and also expanding, while servicing the debt.


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#11494 DayTraderDad

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 02:33 PM

According to H1FY2017 book value of the Automotive was EUR475 mil so if they can sell for more it will help offset the impairment for the sale of the MF 49.9%.;

My thought in the final debt restructuring after a couple of green beers. Hahaha

Initial debt                                                                         9300    Excluding SA debt
POCO Debt takeover                                                         -140    Concluded
POCO – Moneys to receive from sale 50%                        -271    Concluded
Sale of Kika Leiner                                                            -590    Concluded
Sale of Matress Firm 49,9%                                              -525    Concluded
Recovery from Wieser advance to buy SHP                     -350    Concluded
Sale of Hemisphere – Should be the next step                 -324    Remaining  with PropCos rental income – EUR 29.6 mil
Sale of Conforama properties – In the news                    -850    In news prop sale 850
Sale of Automotive business                                            -617    Book value 475 but bought new business
SEAG Debt taken by  PEPCO, Greenlit and Conforama  -1478   
Sale of KAAP shares                                                         -360    At today’s market value
Sale 49.9% of PEPCO and Greenlit & Conforama          -3,795    Half of turnover. There is news SNH looking for interest in PEPCO
Other debt                                                                             0   
DEBT of SNH to be carried after restructuring                      0   

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#11495 DayTraderDad

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 01:55 PM

Great going to be a very good December!

According to H1FY2017 book value of the Automotive was EUR475 mil so if they can sell for more it will help offset the impairment for the sale of the MF 49.9%.;


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#11496 DayTraderDad

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 01:46 PM

Consider it highly likely...

Great going to be a very good December!


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#11497 Bubble

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 01:06 PM

This would be very good news because turnover is  EUR766 for the H1 FY18 and with luck maybe they can get 1 x turnover for it which would be EUR1.5 bil

Consider it highly likely...


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#11498 DayTraderDad

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 12:56 PM

That would be good news for me its not core business best sell it the same as the automotive business but remember Unitrass is also part of Greenlit Brands in Aussie.

This would be very good news because turnover is  EUR766 for the H1 FY18 and with luck maybe they can get 1 x turnover for it which would be EUR1.5 bil


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#11499 Lionelza1

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 12:48 PM

Lol keep licking leo... I doubt it will come
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#11500 DayTraderDad

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Posted 30 November 2018 - 12:04 PM

  attachicon.gifCapture.PNG

 

Not looking good, drop in the bonds - 1 Week anlysis

I think there are investors in bonds that maybe want out


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