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Bouris facing judgment, too
By · 7 May 2013
By ·
7 May 2013
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Bouris facing judgment, too

On television, Mark Bouris passes stern judgment on the business efforts of the famous and slightly well-known as top dog on Nine's Celebrity Apprentice.

Any contestant who fails to measure up inevitably cops the show's catchphrase: "You're fired."

Last week singer Prinnie Stevens got the boot and on Tuesday night another of the show's roster of former reality TV contestants, PR people, washed-up pop stars and former Paris Hilton boy toys will hear the magic words. (Bouris is also a BusinessDay columnist.)

CBD wonders what shareholders in TZ Limited, at which Bouris is chairman and executive director, would like to say to him. TZ's latest quarterly report, filed last week, shows the electronic locker maker has burnt through cash, eating up about $1.1 million in the first three months of 2013.

That left it with about the same amount left in the kitty, plus an available line of credit of $858,000.

"We were burning $350,000 a month - we're down to $100,000 a month. The burn rate is reducing very rapidly," Bouris told CBD. "Generally speaking the brokers and everyone are pretty happy with it - for the first time, I might add." He said a capital raising was possible and revenue was increasing "very rapidly".

"Our biggest shareholder is a big New York hedge fund [QVT] and they've been pretty good to us in extending funds in the past."

According to TZ, it delivers "real world strategies for embedding intelligence into everyday objects".

CBD can't help thinking it would be good if some intelligence was embedded into Celebrity Apprentice. The claim to fame of one contestant, Layla Subritzky, appears to be that she can jam five Tim Tams into her gob at once.

F1 mystery

She was to be the Australian set to reap a multimillion windfall from the float of formula one. But now mystery shrouds the shareholdings of former Australian Grand Prix boss Judith Griggs and other key figures behind the F1 circus.

Formula one is widely said to be headed for a float on the Singapore exchange at a value of about $10 billion, providing an opportunity for its shareholders to cash out. For the past few years, most of Delta Topco, the Jersey-registered company behind F1, has belonged to private equity group CVC, with a 13.8 per cent stake in the hands of formula one's pint-sized tyrant, Bernie Ecclestone.

But a handful of Bernie's loyal consiglieri, including Griggs, have also been rewarded with small stakes. Griggs fended off the protests of anti-race activists as chief executive of the Melbourne Grand Prix in the early '90s after it was poached from Adelaide.

Griggs is now firmly ensconced in the F1 family as an executive at the Swiss company that sells corporate grand prix packages, Allsport Management.

Delta Topco's 2011 annual return shows she owned 0.529 per cent of the company, worth $53 million in a $10 billion float - a far cry from the stake's face value of about $53,000.

Other individual shareholders at that point were WPP boss Martin Sorrell (0.265 per cent), Nestle chairman Peter Brabeck-Letmathe (0.265 per cent), F1 chief financial officer Duncan Llowarch (0.794 per cent), Griggs' Allsport boss Paddy McNally (1.059 per cent) and F1's chief legal officer Sacha Woodward Hill (0.794 per cent). However, come February this year and the lodgment of the 2012 annual return, and all these names had melted away like the fog that sometimes hangs over Jersey.

Some time in 2012, Delta Topco's shareholding structure changed. The individual shareholders disappeared from the register and the company now has four times as many shares on issue, held in the names of a bewildering assortment of funds associated with CVC, JPMorgan, US vulture fund BlackRock, asset managers Waddell & Reed and insurer MassMutual.

Perhaps Griggs and the others now hold their stakes through one of the new shareholders. CBD couldn't raise her by email to ask. However, it's clear Ecclestone retains at least a small slice of F1, held in the name of his Jersey company, Bambino Holdings.

Explorer hits snag

The future looks ugly for Takoradi, the mining explorer run by former Cleo bachelor of the year contender Rodney Hudspeth.

Handsome Hudspeth made the final 50 contenders in the contest back in the '80s (see CBD, February 9, 1989, edited by Glenn Burge, now a Fairfax Media exec).

Back then Cleo panted at Hudspeth's estimated $180 million fortune - about $340 million in today's money - and "palatial ... waterfront mansion".

These days, $180 million would come in handy for Takoradi, which according to its most recent ASX disclosure is down to its last $10,000 - which won't go far, given it estimates its cash outflows are $350,000 a quarter.

The quarterly result, to the end of March, follows a half-year report in early March in which auditor Alex Swansson of BDO qualified the accounts because of concerns that two Namibian subsidiaries might not be able to pay their bills. Swansson also said the loss-making company had yet to pay $2 million due to secured noteholders in October 2011.

Got a tip?

bbutler@fairfaxmedia.com.au
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Frequently Asked Questions about this Article…

TZ Limited's quarterly report for the first three months of 2013 showed it burned about $1.1 million, leaving roughly the same amount in cash and an available line of credit of $858,000. Management said the monthly cash burn had fallen from around $350,000 to about $100,000.

Mark Bouris is chairman and an executive director of TZ Limited. The article also notes he is a judge on Nine's Celebrity Apprentice and a BusinessDay columnist.

According to the article, TZ management indicated a capital raising was possible and said revenue was increasing "very rapidly." The comments also noted brokers appeared satisfied with the company's improving cash burn.

TZ's biggest shareholder is a New York hedge fund identified as QVT. The article says QVT has been supportive in the past by extending funds to TZ when needed.

Formula One was widely reported to be heading for a float on the Singapore exchange at an estimated value of about $10 billion. Delta Topco, the Jersey-registered company behind F1, altered its shareholding structure in 2012: several individual shareholders named in the 2011 annual return disappeared from the register and ownership shifted to a larger number of shares held by funds linked to CVC, JPMorgan, BlackRock, Waddell & Reed and MassMutual.

Delta Topco's 2011 annual return showed small individual stakes for people including Judith Griggs (0.529%). By the 2012 annual return those individual names had gone from the register, suggesting their holdings may now be held through institutional or fund structures, though the exact arrangements were not clarified in the article.

Takoradi said it was down to about $10,000 in cash while estimating cash outflows of $350,000 a quarter. Its half-year report included an auditor's qualification from Alex Swansson of BDO over concerns that two Namibian subsidiaries might not be able to pay their bills, and the company had not paid $2 million due to secured noteholders from October 2011.

Corporate disclosures like quarterly cash-burn figures, lines of credit, auditor qualifications and changes to a company's share register are key signals about financial health and ownership. In this article examples: TZ disclosed reduced burn and possible capital raising, Delta Topco's register change signalled a shift to institutional ownership ahead of a potential float, and Takoradi's filings showed severe cash stress and an auditor qualification. Investors often watch these items to better understand liquidity, governance and potential dilution or ownership shifts.