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Home / The Country

Crafar farm bid decision close

NZ Herald
19 Jan, 2012 11:52 PM4 mins to read

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Crafar Farm cows walk back to the paddock after milking. A poll commissioned by the Michael Fay led consortium wanting to buy the farms has found deep opposition to selling the farms to Chinese investors. Photo / Christine Cornege

Crafar Farm cows walk back to the paddock after milking. A poll commissioned by the Michael Fay led consortium wanting to buy the farms has found deep opposition to selling the farms to Chinese investors. Photo / Christine Cornege

The Overseas Investment Office says it will make a decision on whether to approve Chinese company Shanghai Pengxin's bid to buy the Crafar dairy farms before the January 31 deadline for the deal set by receiver Michael Stiassny.

Should the deal get Overseas Investment Office (OIO) and ministerial approval it will face a high-powered legal challenge from a rival group of buyers led by businessman Sir Michael Fay.

Nine months after it was first lodged, the OIO is still considering Shanghai Pengxin's $200 million offer for 16 dairy farms formerly owned by the Crafar family which were placed in receivership two years ago.

Since Shanghai Pengxin made its offer, a consortium led by Sir Michael has emerged with a competing offer which, although lower, has been touted as better as it would keep the land under local ownership.

Yesterday, Sir Michael's consortium said it had hired leading Queen's Counsel Alan Galbraith and law firm Bell Gully to lead a legal challenge if the OIO approves Shanghai Pengxin's offer.

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"Our view is that there's no way that Shanghai Pengxin meets the test in the OIO legislation which basically says the buyer must have business acumen and experience relevant to the investment," said Alan McDonald, spokesman for Sir Michael's Crafar Farms Purchase Group.

Meanwhile, Crafar receiver Mr Stiassny yesterday said he was sticking with the January 31 deadline he has set for Shanghai Pengxin to come up with an unconditional offer - which effectively means it must have OIO approval by then.

The OIO yesterday said it was unable to say when it would reach a decision. Today it had changed its mind, saying it would make a recommendation to Land Information Minister Maurice Williamson and Associate Finance Minister Jonathan Coleman before January 31.

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The Herald this morning reported Opposition MP Trevor Mallard's suggestion the decision may be deliberately delayed until after the deadline to spare the Government the diplomatic embarrassment of knocking back an offer said to be backed by the Chinese Government.

OIO spokesman Brad Young said it was purely coincidental the OIO was able to give an indication of the timing of its decision after the report when it could not do so yesterday.

Mr Mallard this week said he understood ministers had been told Shanghai Pengxin was effectively owned by the Chinese Government.

Similarly, Mr McDonald said Sir Michael's consortium had been told by a minister that Shanghai Pengxin was "backed" by the Chinese Government.

Discover more

Opinion

Fran O'Sullivan: China ready to fight for its pound of flesh

09 Aug 09:30 PM
Opinion

Fran O'Sullivan: Fay playing 'local' card with Crafar bid

16 Aug 05:30 PM
Business

Fay's Crafar bid 'well below' Chinese offer

20 Sep 04:42 AM
Agribusiness

Spurned Crafar bid not the end for us, says Fay

26 Sep 04:30 PM

Finance Minister Bill English yesterday would not say whether he was aware of any Chinese Government interest in Shanghai Pengxin or its offer but advised through a spokesman: "That question would be best directed to the company itself."

Shanghai Pengxin spokesman Cedric Allan yesterday denied any Chinese Government involvement with Shanghai Pengxin and said the issue had already been extensively probed by the OIO.

But Mr Mallard said he understood the Chinese Embassy had been involved in discussions about the offer. Whether China's Government owned Shanghai Pengxin or was simply supporting its bid for the farms, it made the situation a difficult one for the New Zealand Government.

"With backing, and even more so if it's owned, it makes it harder diplomatically for people to tell them to p*** off.

"Clearly the Government is under some sort of pressure, how much we don't know, but the fact that they must have knowledge of the Chinese Government's interest in it must in itself constitute pressure so they'll have that in their mind when they're making their decision."

Mr Mallard said instructing the OIO to delay its decision until after Mr Stiassny's deadline "might be the easiest way" for ministers to deal with the application.

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