Carey Olsen's Dispute Resolution Group has successfully secured orders on two separate applications under Guernsey's Protection of Investors and Company Law legislation to place two regulated entities into administration and one company into compulsory liquidation.
The Managing Partner of the firm’s Guernsey office, Advocate John Greenfield, and Senior Associate, Tim Bamford, acted for the Guernsey Financial Services Commission (the "Commission") on both applications.
The three companies concerned are part of the Providence investment group, which has been the subject of recent local and international media coverage. The Commission held concerns about the operation and financial position of the Providence group, including in relation to investor funds placed into a locally based investment fund in the group. The Commission instructed Carey Olsen to present the two applications to secure urgent protection for investors and the wider public.
The first application was brought under the Protection of Investors (Administration and Intervention) (Bailiwick of Guernsey) Ordinance, 2008 (the "2008 Ordinance") which empowers the Commission to apply to the Royal Court to place regulated entities into administration where it considers there is an undue risk to investors.
The Royal Court granted the order sought and placed Providence Investment Funds PCC Limited and Providence Investment Management International Limited into administration, appointing Andrew Isham, Alexander Adam and Philip Bowers of Deloitte LLP as joint administration managers.
This application is one of only a handful of similar applications which have ever been brought under the 2008 Ordinance. As such, it is a notable case in demonstrating the powers available to the Commission and the Royal Court to act to protect investors in critical situations.
The second application was brought under the Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008, as amended (the "Companies Law"), to place the parent company of the Providence group into compulsory winding-up to protect the public and the reputation of the Bailiwick of Guernsey.
“This case serves to illustrate the extensive statutory powers of the Commission to wind-up a non-regulated company in circumstances where the normal applicants for such an order (directors, shareholders, creditors) have no interest in pursuing such an application – indeed many certainly oppose it,” said Advocate Greenfield.
The application was considered necessary by the Commission following evidence uncovered about the operational and financial position of the group which necessitated the urgent appointment of liquidators to its parent company. It was necessary to give the Commission the legal status to those funds that may have passed through the company on behalf of investors. The Royal Court granted the order, and appointed Messrs Isham, Adam and Bowers as joint liquidators.
This type of application is extremely rare, and there are believed to be no reported decisions of the same type under the current Companies Law. It is therefore a significant case of note to highlight the power of Guernsey's regulator and the Royal Court to intervene in appropriate situations to protect investors and the wider public, as well as the reputation of the island.
Carey Olsen was instrumental in acting swiftly on behalf of the Commission to secure the urgent protective relief sought for investors and for the Bailiwick as a whole, enabling the administrators and liquidators to gain access to the group to carry out their statutory duties.