The education provider raised about $60 million in an initial public offering in 2014 to fund the acquisition of the Quantum group and become the country's biggest private training organisation, selling shares at $2.35 apiece and valuing the company at $252.5m, but has slumped to just 3 cents, or $3m.
Intueri was stitched together by ASX-listed Arowana International, which kept a 24.9 per cent stake in the New Zealand company. The offer, which came in a year when the IPO pipeline was running hot, was managed by UBS New Zealand and Macquarie Securities (NZ).
However, the company's bid to go public was beset with troubles from the get-go. It had to amend its prospectus after a student died at its diving school, and needed a waiver to let it list with just 330 retail shareholders rather than the minimum 500 normally required.
That offer document got a ticking off by the Financial Markets Authority which said the prospectus could have been clearer about how student enrollment figures were disclosed without taking more action, while the TEC restricted enrollments for unfunded students and the SFO sought information about the Quantum school.
Intueri said it expects the SFO will end its inquiry once the TEC report is released, with Quantum the "only outstanding regulatory matter for Intueri's New Zealand operations".
In its 2016 annual report, Arowana said it had been "dismayed and very disappointed at what has transpired with Intueri Education" and that its engagement after the IPO had been "very limited and more than arm's length".