At the time the assets were moved across they were valued at $96 million but were subsequently scaled back by Hubbard.
Some $4.9 million of Aorangi's $25 million investment in Te Tua Charitable Trust, which was administered by the Hubbards, has been recovered and provisions have been made for $11.5 million that may not be recoverable, the managers said in their 10th statutory managers report.
Because many of the loans were 'last resort' loans, recovery "will take time and there are likely to be substantial losses on this part of Aorangi assets," they said.
The report said the managers have been approached by a lawyer for someone claiming to be an Aorangi investor owed $5.6 million, which they claim was transferred without their authorisation to another entity associated with Hubbard in December 2009.
The managers made the general point that in the early days of Aorangi, up until 2004, loans to Aorangi were secured through direct relationships with borrowers, but such relationships had subsequently been eliminated by loans repayments and advances.
Total realisations to date are $36 million, of which $20 million is being held subject to determination of ownership of assets.
Investor balances in 2007 were about $135 million and the company had "a significant balance of cash on hand" that year.
"It appears that $140 million has been utilised to repay investors' principal and $95 million of new investor funds have been deposited with Aorangi since 2007," the managers said. "In our review of loans over the past five years, we have ascertained that very little interest was received on actual loans."