Sharechat Logo

New $112 million investment bank

Friday 8th December 2000

Text too small?
By Campbell McIlroy

Wellington's Strategic Investment Group and Auckland's Salisbury Group have merged to create a $112 million investment bank with ambitions of becoming a dominant player in commercial property financing.

The new investment bank, Strategic Investment Group, will operate three wholly owned subsidiaries specialising in capital investment, corporate advisory and finance.

The subsidiaries will be known as Strategic Capital, Strategic Investment Group, and Strategic Finance.

The merger, effective from December 1, equally splits the shareholding in the new company among its six directors, three from each company.

They are Paul Bublitz, John Pendergrast and former All Black captain Jock Hobbs from Strategic, and Graham Jackson, Brian Fitzgerald and Marc Lindale from Salisbury.

Mr Bublitz and Mr Jackson will be joint managing directors.

Mr Bublitz said the merger, which the companies had been working on for the last two to three months, came as a result of work on Auckland's Princes Wharf development.

Mr Jackson said the two companies realised from the financing side of the business there were areas of synergy.

"We got to a size where we had to decide whether to take the foot off the accelerator and settle where we were or look at how we could move ahead," Mr Jackson said.

Salisbury's investment banking activities would operate as a wholly owned subsidiary of Strategic Capital while its mezzanine finance business would become a wholly owned subsidiary of Strategic Finance.

Mr Bublitz said the merger would also strengthen Strategic Mortgages, which SFL and Bank of New Zealand established early this year as a jointly funded first-mortgage lending company. In less than three months it completed over $62 million worth of commercial loans.

Salisbury is probably best known for raising finance facilities of over $230 million for the Prince's Wharf development.

The company also advised Ericsson Communications in the divestment of Ericsson Cellular to Telecom, as well as Wel Energy Trust over its $112 million controlling shareholding in the Wel Energy Group.

It was also commercial adviser to the Hutt Mana Energy Trust during its strategic investment in Natural Gas Corporation through a $100 million TransAlta share and notes swap.

Mr Jackson said there were definite plans to expand the business advisory side of the business and the company would look to employ two or three more staff to make sure it was adequately resourced.

  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

EROAD FY24 Results and Webinar Details
thl reduces FY24 NPAT guidance
May 6th Morning Report
Spark New Zealand appoints new director to the Spark Board
AFT to announce full year results on May 23 2024
CRP - Korella North Takes Another Two Steps Forward
May 3rd Morning Report
ASB workers to strike as bank proposes an effective pay cut
Rising tides, sinking stocks: study explores cost of climate change
May 2nd Morning Report