Legal Business

Slater and Gordon LLP accounts show profits down and liabilities up in rocky period for listed firm

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Slater and Gordon (S&G) which wrote down much of its UK business in February, has posted its LLP accounts for 2015, revealing while turnover was up and liabilities increased significantly at the PI firm.

The firm revealed earlier this year a £493m global loss for the six months to 31 December 2015, further details of its UK component’s financials were made public on Companies House today, covering the year for June 2015. 

The accounts show UK fee and service revenue was up 51.2% from £101.7m to £153.8m, while a goodwill impairment of £269m, announced in February, drove the firm’s loss for the year down to £251.2m. Before the goodwill impairment and tax, profits were up 14.1% from £20.4m to £23.2m.

According to the accounts, profits for the year had improved before the goodwill impairment, directly attributable to the acquisitions of Walker Smith Way and Leo Abse Cohen, and general increases in fees across both personal injury and general law.

The results show that Quindell, now known as Slater and Gordon Solutions, contributed £19.7m in revenue but made a post-tax loss of £2.45m for 2015.

S&G’s UK current liabilities rocketed to £334m from £146.5m, as long term borrowings escalated to £307.8m from £40.4m.

In February, S&G announced its plans to restructure its UK operation, as it announced disappointing global results including the goodwill impairment. It had a two month window until the end of March from its banks to deliver a repayment plan by the end of this month for its debt of A$741m. However it has remained silent on what agreement, if any, has been reached.

At the end of last month the firm’s general counsel and company secretary Moana Weir resigned after spending just two months at the firm. In February the firm’s UK chief, Neil Kinsella, announced his retirement as UK head of general law, with Siri Siriwardene replacing him.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

 

Legal Business

Slater and Gordon general counsel jumps ship after less than two months

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Australian-listed Slater and Gordon‘s general counsel (GC) and company secretary Moana Weir has resigned after spending less than two months at the troubled firm.

The firm announced Weir’s resignation which was ‘effective immediately’ in a statement on Australian Securities Exchange on Thursday. Weir had begun working as the firm’s GC on January 29 after her appointment was announced in October 27. She joined the firm from job site Seek where she had been working as the company’s GC for six years.

Slater and Gordon’s current group chief financial officer Bryce Houghton will take up the role of company secretary. Houghton joined the firm in November of last year, leaving global education provider Navitas where he was chief financial officer for ten years.

According to an ASX-statement the firm will fill the role of general counsel with an ‘external adviser while re-assessing its business needs.’

Slater and Gordon is presently under deadline, after it was given a two month window by its banks to deliver a repayment plan by the end of April for its debt of A$741m. Concurrently the firm announced its plans to restructure its UK operation in February after posting an A$958m (£493m) loss for the six months ending 31 December 2015, primarily due to a hefty writedown of its UK business. The firm, which makes about 45% of its revenue in the UK, confirmed in January it was consulting on the closure of two its UK offices, which would affect 51 staff.

The firm’s profits for the last financial year were significantly affected by a non-cash impairment charge of A$876.4m against goodwill, mostly due to a A$814.2m impairment in goodwill for its Slater Gordon Solutions unit, previously known as Quindell. The firm said the potential impact of the government’s planned changes which would limit personal injury claims, was a significant factor in the goodwill impairment.

In February the firm’s UK chief, Neil Kinsella, announced his retirement as UK head of general law, with Siri Siriwardene replacing him. The announcement coincided with media reports that the firm was in talks over debt restructuring and brought in FTI Consulting in a bid to address its financial health.

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Guest post: Slater and Gordon’s woes have nothing to do with being an ABS

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It is somewhat appropriate that Slater and Gordon (S&G) sponsors England cricket captain Alastair Cook (pictured), no stranger himself to sudden collapses.

Yesterday’s results could not really have been much worse, for owners, investors and staff alike, with those in the UK now bracing themselves for redundancies.

Schadenfreude abounded on social media and some websites, but the real shame is that, until last year, S&G was a significant success story.

The first listed law firm in the world, it had used its access to capital to grow phenomenally in Australia before coming over here and doing the same. After laying down its base with Russell Jones & Walker, it bought good, solid firms like Fentons. Revenues were up, profits were up, and the poster child of external investment polished its halo.

And then came the decision to buy Quindell’s professional services division. Many questioned the deal at the time given the bad smell around Quindell, but concerns focused particularly on the valuation, which required S&G to load itself with debt. Last August, I gave them the benefit of the doubt, relying on the firm’s unparalleled experience of acquisitions and the due diligence they had carried out.

But there’s nowhere to hide for a listed company and the figures from the second half of 2015 indicate that this confidence was woefully misplaced. S&G bought a pup and they cannot say they weren’t warned.

How the due diligence went wrong is a big question, but ultimately, I think S&G simply bit off more than it could chew. It bought a business that was valued (at the time) at more than S&G’s combined Australian and UK operations and doubled staff numbers overnight.

The firm’s management also seriously underestimated the reputational damage that came with Quindell. Changing the division’s name to Slater Gordon Solutions (the absence of the ampersand has bothered me from the start) helped not one jot. The share price went into freefall and it’s all been bad news since.

But equally S&G could not have predicted the latest round of whiplash reforms announced in November’s Autumn Statement. While a return to the question of raising the small claims limit for personal injury (PI) was not a surprise – even if the timing was – the possibility of completely banning claims for general damages in ‘low value’ whiplash cases came totally out of the blue.

S&G continues to depend heavily on PI in the UK, and bought from Quindell a business that specialises in precisely the kind of cases under threat. That is not a happy place to be, and is a macro version of the worries that are spilling across much smaller PI firms.

So where now? That rather depends on S&G’s lenders and whether they are willing to renegotiate the terms of its debts. The firm is working on a restructure proposal to take to its banking syndicate this month. Any amendments made to its debt facility must be made by the end of April, but if no agreement is reached, the earliest the debt can be called in is 31 March 2017. If this happened, how could the firm possibly pay off £380m (as of 31 December 2015)?

Restructuring in the UK is also underway; just as alarming as the goodwill write-down was the underperformance of the operation over here. Although turnover continued to rise, earnings dived as cases didn’t conclude on the expected timescale. Where did that come from? Many believe that the future of PI is large practices benefiting from economies of scale and so on – S&G is set to be the test bed for this theory.

But you know they’re in trouble when part of the plan is to ‘actively’ engage with insurers with the aim of reducing frictional costs and delay. Except for those that are clients of SGS’s motor business, I can’t imagine the insurance industry being that keen to help such a prominent claimant firm out of its hole.

The Solicitors Regulation Authority for one will be hoping S&G sorts itself out – dealing with a firm as big as this if it all goes wrong could be a near-insurmountable task.

But many of those commenting on yesterday’s news see it as further proof, were any needed since the collapse of Parabis, that the alternative business structure experiment is condemned to failure.

I still don’t see it that way. S&G was a successful firm that appears to have made a monumentally bad business decision. That has nothing to do with being an ABS, except that it was able to raise some of the cash for the deal from shareholders. Maybe this access to funding encouraged S&G to overreach itself.

But ABS is just a means to an end; it is no golden bullet for business success. As I said last August, what has happened doesn’t point to any inherent weakness in ABSs.

It’s also worth noting that creditors lost even more (about £200m) from the failure of Halliwells, a ‘traditional’ law firm, than they are set to from Parabis.

This is all of little consolation to those staff at S&G worried about their jobs. S&G has not become a bad firm overnight and let us hope that those who took the firm to the summit and then pushed it down the other side, are able to get this legal business back on solid footing.

Neil Rose is the editor and founder of Legal Futures, you can read his blog here.

 

 

 

Legal Business

Slater and Gordon launches restructuring plan as six month loss nears £500m

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Slater and Gordon (S&G) is to restructure its UK operation after posting an A$958m (£493m) loss for the six months ending 31 December 2015, primarily due to a hefty writedown of its UK business.

The Australian-listed firm has been given a two month deadline by its banks to deliver a repayment plan as it faces debt of A$741m.

Shares in the personal injury company closed at AU$0.58 on the ASX, dropping 30% in reaction to its half year results and subsequent announcements.

S&G managing director Andrew Grech said: ‘Clearly today’s results are very disappointing. In particular the decline in business performance in the UK is of serious concern to all at S&G and will equally be of concern to our investors. We will therefore be taking a number of necessary and significant steps to improve the operational performance of both the UK performance and the broader S&G group.’

Last month S&G, which makes about 45% of its revenue in the UK, confirmed it was consulting on the closure of two its UK offices, which would affect 51 staff.

The company reported that in the UK while general law revenue was in line with expectations, personal injury law revenue was ‘materially weaker than expected’, and S&G said a new practice and case management system caused a loss of productivity in the first half.

The profits were significantly affected by a non-cash impairment charge of A$876.4m against goodwill, mostly due to a A$814.2m impairment in goodwill for its Slater Gordon Solutions unit, previously known as Quindell. The firm said the potential impact of the government’s planned changes which would limit personal injury claims, was a significant factor in the goodwill impairment.

It has been a turbulent year for the firm, which last week asked trading in its shares to be halted while it worked with auditors and advisers to finalise earnings.

In February the firm’s UK chief, Neil Kinsella, announced his retirement as UK head of general law, with Siri Siriwardene replacing him. The announcement coincided with media reports that S&G was in talks over debt restructuring and brought in FTI Consulting in a bid to address its financial health.

In the same month the company’s lenders appointed their own investigative accountants to look at the firm’s books. Red flags were raised after the firm withdrew earnings guidance late last year prompting rival firm Maurice Blackburn to open registrations to shareholders wanting to pursue a class action.

After S&G’s £637m purchase of insurance claims handler Quindell’s professional services division (PSD) in May last year, it was announced the Serious Fraud Office was investigating Quindell’s ‘business and accounting practices’ as the company published revised annual accounts for 2014 showing a £312m swing from profit to loss in its PSD. The change saw what was logged as a £175m pre-tax profit for the PSD corrected to a £137m loss.

madeline.farman@legalease.co.uk 

Legal Business

Slater & Gordon UK chief Kinsella retires amid turbulent period for PI group

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Australia-listed Slater & Gordon‘s UK chief, Neil Kinsella, has retired and will be succeeded by the firm’s UK head of general law, Siri Siriwardene.

Announced today (5 February) Kinsella (pictured) served as chief executive of Russell Jones & Walker when the firm was bought by the rapidly-expanding Slater & Gordon in 2012 and has held a number of senior positions, including its first UK chief executive and more recently as interim head of general law UK.

This news follows the firm’s announcement in late January that it plans to axe two of its UK offices, a move that could affect 51 staff in Derby and Manchester.

It has been a turbulent few months for Slater & Gordon, with problems having arisen following its £637m acquisition of the professional services division of Quindell last year, which was followed by an 86% fall in share value on the Australian Stock Exchange. In October, the firm posted revised accounts that showed UK profit after tax of nearly £20m against a revenue of £128m for the 2014/15 financial year, while its Australia operation saw a net profit of £21m on income of £145m. The firm revised the accounts after an audit of its UK business.

There have been further media reports in London and Australia this week that the ASX-listed group is currently in talks over debt restructuring and has brought in FTI Consulting in a bid to address its financial health. On this, the firm refused to comment.

In January it also emerged Slater & Gordon was facing a further inquiry as its lenders appointed their own forensic accountants to examine the books. The firm withdrew its earnings guidance late last year, which prompted rival firm Maurice Blackburn to open registrations to shareholders wanting to pursue a class action.

During his time at S&G Kinsella oversaw a significant extension of the UK business, including the bolt-ons of claimant PI firms Fentons and John Pickering & Partners, as well as a substantial chunk of Manchester stalwart Pannone – all in 2013.

Slater & Gordon’s managing director Andrew Grech said: ‘After working on a succession plan with Neil Kinsella for the last few years he has now decided it is time to retire from the Slater & Gordon business. During his time with the firm, he has steered Slater & Gordon into a new era of working, embracing technological advances to ensure that clients receive outstanding service in ways which suit them best.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Slater & Gordon plans closure of two UK offices

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Months after the UK government announced unexpected personal injury reforms, Slater & Gordon is consulting on the closure of two its UK offices, a move which could affect 51 staff.

The firm, which is listed in Australia, confirmed consultation began yesterday for the review, covering legal and non-legal staff – of which there are 14 in Derby and 37 in Failsforth, Manchester. Both offices concentrate on personal injury work.

Slater & Gordon, which according to its last annual report has 1,300 people in 13 UK locations, said as part of the consultation it was possible staff could move to other offices.

A spokesperson from Slater & Gordon said: ‘As part of a review of our property portfolio Slater & Gordon has begun assessing the feasibility of closing two of our offices, Failsworth and Derby.

During this process we will work closely with all staff who will be impacted if a decision is made not to renew our lease on the site.

All staff affected have been made aware there is the possibility of redundancy. Understandably, this can be unsettling for staff, but we will, where possible, help individuals find other opportunities within the Slater & Gordon Group.’

Earlier this month, it was revealed the firm faced further inquiry as the company’s lenders appointed their own investigative accountants to look at the firm’s books. The firm’s chief financial officer is already reviewing the accounts, in particular the company’s forecasts. 

The firm withdrew earnings guidance late last year, which prompted rival firm Maurice Blackburn to open registrations to shareholders wanting to pursue a class action.

victoria.young@legalease.co.uk

Read more about Slater & Gordon in the comment piece: ‘Guest post: Why the fuss over Slater & Gordon?’

Legal Business

Further scrutiny: Banks order investigative review of Slater and Gordon’s books

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Australian-listed Slater and Gordon is facing further inquiry as the company’s lenders have appointed their own investigative accountants to look at the firm’s books.

The revelation follows the firm withdrawing earnings guidance late last year, which prompted rival firm Maurice Blackburn to open registrations to shareholders wanting to pursue a class action.

Shares in the stock which traded at A$6.41 a year ago closed today (7 January) at A73c, a decline of almost 90%. The firm, which makes 80% of its UK revenue from personal injury claims, lost half its stock market value in November after the UK government unexpectedly announced plans to limit the number of personal injury claims.

In a statement to the Australian Stock Exchange the firm, which has already faced scrutiny after its A$1.3bn acquisition of Quindell, confirmed McGrathNicol has been separately appointed to look at its accounts, at the request of its lenders.

Group managing director Andrew Grech said in a statement it had commenced a review of the company’s forecasts by group CFO Bryce Houghton and independent advisers by the board.

‘We agreed that our banking syndicate would appoint their own advisers who will work alongside those appointment by the board. The company has continued to work collaboratively and cooperatively with the banks and our advisers.’

When opening registrations for the class action last year, Maurice Blackburn principal Jacob Varghese said it was becoming hard to believe the company had proper systems in place.

“We know that poor business decisions or a price drop of themselves don’t satisfy the requirements of launching a class action, but we are now firmly of the view that the activities of SGH require proper scrutiny by the best.’

victoria.young@legalease.co.uk

Read more about Slater & Gordon in the comment piece: ‘Guest post: Why the fuss over Slater and Gordon?’

Legal Business

Slater & Gordon share price halves following ‘unexpected’ government personal injury proposals

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Australian-listed Slater & Gordon (S&G), which makes 80% of its UK revenue from personal injury claims, lost half its stock market value yesterday (25 November) after the UK government announced plans to limit the number of personal injury claims.

Chancellor George Osborne revealed yesterday in his Autumn Statement government plans to curbs personal injury (PI) firms pursuing road accident claims in a bid to bring down the cost of motor insurance. The government wants to remove the right to general damages for minor injuries and increase the threshold for small claims to £5,000 to cover a greater volume of injuries in small claims court.

Yesterday shares in the ASX-listed firm dropped 54%, falling to A$0.89 in Sydney trading before recovering to close at A$0.94, a fall of 51% that day. Its shares have fallen from a high of A$7.85 in April.

S&G, which makes about 45% of its revenue in the UK, said it ‘does not expect there to be any impact on its FY16 performance, or the guidance recently confirmed at the company’s AGM, arising from the government’s announcement.’

The firm said the proposal, if implemented, would restrict the right of people injured in road traffic accidents to obtain compensation for pain and suffering in minor soft tissue injury claims, while preserving the right to claim compensation for other loss.

The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) now intends to consult on the details of the government proposal early next year, with S&G stating it will ‘participate in the foreshadowed consultation process and provide further information on the impact (if any) on its financial performance in 2017 and beyond’.

It added: ‘Whilst the announcement was unexpected, the company believes the scale and diversity of the Slater Gordon Solutions (formerly Quindell) business in the UK positions it well to deal with the potential impact of any future legislative change.’

In October the firm posted revised accounts which showed UK profit after tax of nearly £20m on revenue of £128m for the 2014/15 financial year, while its Australia operation saw a net profit of £21m on income of £145m. S&G revised the accounts after an audit of the firm’s UK Business. S&G, which in May acquired two UK law personal injury firms Walker Smith Way and Leo Abse & Cohen, has had its Quindell acquisition come under heavy scrutiny for its accounting practices. 

Meanwhile the Law Society criticised the government’s personal injury reforms, saying it would respond to the consultation ‘robustly’.

President Jonathan Smithers said: ‘These proposals are not, as stated, about stopping fraudulent claims. Fraudulent claims are clearly repellent but they should be dealt with by targeting the fraudsters and not the vast majority of honest claimants who have been injured and bring genuine claims.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk

Read more about how the Autumn Statement affects the legal sector here, and our guest comment on ‘Osborne’s bizarre personal injury proposals’ here 

 

Legal Business

Slater & Gordon to put non-exec director pay rise to vote at AGM

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Australian listed firm Slater & Gordon will ask shareholders to vote on a pay increase for its four non-executive directors at its Annual General Meeting (AGM) next month.

The rise, if approved, would provide their maximum pay to be boosted from A$650,000 (£305,000) to A$950,000 (£446,000).

In the AGM notice, the firm said that that the higher maximum aggregate remuneration was being sought to ‘allow the company the flexibility to increase the number of non-executive director appointments to oversee the significantly expanded company operations, whilst also providing for fee increases from 1 July 2015 to compensate non-executive directors for their expanded responsibilities and time commitment.’

The move comes despite the law firm’s share price tumbling over the last six months, from A$6.54 to A$2.83 at the market close yesterday. Earlier this month the firm revealed a revised version of its accounts following an audit of its UK business as a result of the controversy over its £637m purchase of Quindell’s Professional Services Division (PSD).

The accounts showed profits after tax of nearly £20m on revenue of £128m for the 2014/15 financial year, with the firm stating that 80% of its UK income was derived from personal injury work, while its Australia operation saw a net profit of £21m on income of £145m.

After re-branding the PSD, which it purchased from Quindell in May this year, as Slater Gordon Solutions (SGS), the first month of SGS brought in £17m of income, at a net loss of £2.1m. The firm said an audit by EY had identified various adjustments and corrections to its financial results for the 2014/15 and 2013/14 years.

The Quindell acquisition has been under heavy scrutiny over alleged impropriety in relation to the latter’s accounting practices, and the Serious Fraud Office confirmed this summer it was investigating the company when it owned the division after the company published revised annual accounts for 2014 showing a £312m swing from profit to loss.

kathryn.mccann@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Slater & Gordon unveils £20m UK profits in revised accounts

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Following controversy after its £637m purchase of Quindell’s Professional Services Division (PSD), Australian-listed Slater & Gordon (S&G) has revealed a revised version of its accounts following an audit of its UK business, which shows profit after tax of nearly £20m on revenue of £128m for the 2014/15 financial year.

Published on the September 30 deadline for listed companies to provide financial statements, the firm said 80% of its UK income derived from personal injury work, while its Australia operation saw a net profit of £21m on income of £145m.

After re-branding the PSD, which it purchased from Quindell in May this year, as Slater Gordon Solutions (SGS), the first month of SGS brought in £17m of income, at a net loss of £2.1m. The firm said an audit by EY had identified various adjustments and corrections to its financial results for the 2014/15 and 2013/14 years.

The Quindell acquisition has been under heavy scrutiny over alleged impropriety in relation to the latter’s accounting practices, and the Serious Fraud Office confirmed this summer it was investigating the company when it owned the division after the company published revised annual accounts for 2014 showing a £312m swing from profit to loss.

A statement issued yesterday by S&G said: ‘In the course of preparing these financial statements, the directors have sought to identify, understand and properly account for all relevant prior transactions undertaken by entities within SGS. Despite reasonable inquiries, including of current directors of Quindell, the directors are unable to identify or rationalise every historic transaction undertaken by the former directors. The directors believe that none of the known transactions relate to the fundamental business activities or economics of SGS.’

sarah.downey@legalease.co.uk