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From: | "simon dallimore" <smndallimore@hotmail.com> |
Date: | Tue, 02 May 2000 05:34:53 NZST |
New boy on collection block 02.05.2000 - By GEOFF SENESCALL Australian Paul Cooney vows that his new company, Receivables Management Group, will be a vigorous competitor to Baycorp. "One of the problems in New Zealand is there has not been any choice," he said. An indication that the market was taking seriously this new entrant -- which has the backing of Auckland entrepreneur Eric Watson -- saw Baycorp's share price tumble 61c yesterday to 979c. However, while Baycorp dominates the local debt collection and information services business, it was its move into the Australian market midway through last year that provoked Mr Cooney's initiative. Through a joint venture with the Australian company Data Advantage, Baycorp has established a company across the Tasman called Alliance Recoveries. "What I saw was the risk that a company coming into the receivables market in Australia, with access to capital and nominal access to the credit information database of Data Advantage, would have a strategic advantage," Mr Cooney said. "If we allowed them to get a foothold in the Australian market, then the market share -- which was spread around lots of other companies -- would come under threat." Mr Cooney, who has been involved in the debt collection business in Australian for 30 years and is president of the Australian Collectors Association, said he had been toying for the past 12 months with the idea of bringing together a collection of companies and listing them in Australia. The idea took hold when he was invited to talk to analysts in Australia about the Baycorp Data Advantage joint venture, because "most of them were totally unfamiliar that the receivables sector existed. "That gave me an opportunity to talk to a number of players and explain the nature of the industry and our own business against the aspirations that Bay and Data Advantage had for the Australian market. Having spoken to them I took comfort that there was an opportunity for us to do an IPO [initial public offering]. "I began working with some brokers in Australia ... and negotiated with a number of companies, which basically form the core of what we have today." This includes six New Zealand companies and 10 Australian. Mr Cooney said it was through networks in New Zealand that he was introduced to Cullen Investments, the private investment vehicle of Mr Watson. Cullen was interested in going into the information market, given it had a several investments including Pacific Retail Group, which used Baycorp information services, he said. "What they deliver to me I couldn't have matched in any other way, specifically the capital markets expertise and the databases in New Zealand, and I was able to deliver to them 16 companies ready to come together." So in December a decision was made to team up with Cullen and to back Receivables Management Group into Frontier Petroleum, a company listed on both sides of the Tasman, and one in which Cullen had an investment. "Between December and now we have been completing those negotiations, putting together this quite dramatic revolution in the receivables market in Australia and New Zealand." Mr Cooney said that Receivables Management Group had a much larger receivables business, which included billing, ledger management, credit and debt services. This was where Baycorp derived around 50 per cent of its business. "We will, as a result of the rationalisation of the businesses that has already started, genuinely provide an alternative source of receivables management and debt collection facilities. "This will be done through call-centre technology out of our Australian operation and through the fact we are already the largest commercial recovery company in New Zealand. "We are not the largest receivables company in New Zealand, because Baycorp has a large consumer debt recovery business and does a lot of work in ledger management and pre-collection work. "Our commercial arm gives us unique information and the largest commercial database of information. "So there will be market segments where we will immediately have strength to compete with Baycorp.We will then build on those strength through the association that we now have through companies in the Cullen group." "We are confident we will have credit activity information that will not be available to Baycorp. "So we will compete by initially being the largest supplier of commercial credit information, by building our consumer credit information activities and going into the credit information market through the unique data we have through the our position in the commercial market." Mr Cooney said that its alliance with receivables giant NCO Group in the US would broaden the net of services Receivables Management Group could offer. ________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors To remove yourself from this list, please us the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.html.
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