Hi Bill,
I am in the wrong business. Maybe we should do the same thing as all these wonderful companies(BRE-X,SGV,KWG,DELGF,GNU,IPM,NPA,ETC,ETC,ETC) have been doing....WHAT A FUC@&%* JOKE.
KWG tries to trace lost $21M as another unit files for CCAA
Creditor forces St. GeneviŠve to seek protection
By PETER KENNEDY and PAUL BAGNELL The Financial Post In the end, Pierre Gauthier's appetite for promotion may have got the better of him. That was the consensus Friday after St. GeneviŠve Resources Ltd., the flagship company in Gauthier's Montreal mining group, joined affiliate KWG Resources Inc. in seeking court protection from creditors. The Toronto Stock Exchange said trading in shares of St. GeneviŠve and KWG will remain halted "pending clarification of the companies' affairs." Shares of affiliates Genoil Inc. and Emerging Africa Gold Inc. are not expected to trade until Tuesday at the earliest. The probe centres on who in the St. GeneviŠve group signed documents resulting in the transfer of US$5 million from Genoil and $14.8 million from Emerging Africa Gold into accounts of KWG. Results of the probe are expected to be released on Tuesday. "The question is who did what with our money, where did it go and can we recover it,'' said Richard Wilson, a Calgary lawyer acting for Genoil. Jacques Rossignol, a Montreal lawyer retained by KWG and St. GeneviŠve, said he and others would spend the weekend "trying to understand all the transactions that took place." The transactions have raised questions about the involvement of former St. GeneviŠve chief executive Peter Miller and Alain Taillefer, KWG's vice-president of finance. Both have resigned along with other directors in the St. GeneviŠve group. "We don't know who signed the authorization documents,'' said Wilson, adding Genoil's funds have been deposited with Wellington West Capital in Winnipeg. Gauthier or other company spokesmen could not be reached for comment Friday. But analysts and lawyers interviewed by The Financial Post have concluded this is a classic case of a group getting overextended in a bid to fund projects in risky areas like Cuba and Russia. St. GeneviŠve's problems are especially surprising because Gauthier's reputation for raising money is rivalled only by the likes of Robert Friedland, the Singapore financier whose company made the Voisey's Bay nickel strike in Labrador. A 50-year-old former stockbroker, with film-star looks and the gift of the gab, Gauthier is known for taking analysts and fund managers on extravagant trips to projects in Cuba and the Dominican Republic. "Everything he talked about was highly promotional,'' said one analyst, adding that during a 1996 trip to the Caribbean, Gauthier told his guests he would be "the next Friedland.'' But the excursions involving analysts and fund managers from the likes of C.M. Oliver & Co. Ltd., BPI Capital Management Corp. and Altamira Management Ltd. paid off, resulting in glowing reports and raising millions of dollars for his projects. During 1996, Gauthier's group of companies went to the market six times, raising $141.9 million. Underwriters included C.M. Oliver, Midland Walwyn Capital Inc., CIBC Wood Gundy Inc., Yorkton Securities Inc. and Marleau Lemire Securities Inc. But few of the group's many projects have met investors' hopes and share prices of the group's main companies have languished. In early 1996, shares of KWG jumped to $20 a share from $3.35 on a glowing report by an analyst on the company's Gaspar gold exploration project in Cuba, but Gaspar has since been a big disappointment. KWG (KWG/TSE) shares were worth 40› when trading was halted Thursday. Shares of St. GeneviŠve (SGV/TSE) were trading at $1.56 in last December and were valued at 16› apiece on Thursday. In July this year, KWG announced it was on the verge of becoming a major nickel producer, with an agreement to become a 50% owner of the large Cupey nickel mine in Cuba. Gauthier said KWG was required to come up with US$300 million by the end of November to make the deal happen. Earlier this month, however, KWG said it needed more time to negotiate with the Cuban government and raise the needed money. On Thursday, it said it is abandoning the Cupey deal. Insiders and the companies themselves have traded actively in their stocks, records show. For instance, St. GeneviŠve did 146 trades in KWG stock in January alone. Gauthier did 37 trades in St. GeneviŠve stock in May through his personal holding company, Gencap Inc. John Ing, president of Maison Placements Inc. in Toronto, said Gauthier has "a long history" of touting ever-larger projects that never quite reach expectations. He remembered an early Gauthier venture, a gold company that claimed to be able to extract gold from ore by spinning it in a large machine. "That was an object of derision and much amusement."
GOLDIGER. |