HIH Insurance

Last updated

HIH Insurance Ltd
Formerly
  • CE Heath International Holdings Limited (1988–1996)
  • HIH Winterthur International Holdings Limited (1996–1998) [1]
Company type Public
IndustryHealth insurance
Founded6 April 1988;35 years ago (1988-04-06) in Canberra, ACT, Australia [2]
Defunct15 March 2001 (2001-03-15)
Fate Provisional liquidation
Headquarters,
Australia
Area served
Australia
Website HIH Insurance at the Wayback Machine (archived 2001-02-02)
Corporate failure of HIH Insurance
Hihlogo.png
HIH Insurance corporate logo
Inquiries Royal Commission into HIH Insurance
Convicted

HIH Insurance was Australia's second-largest insurance company before it was placed into provisional liquidation on 15 March 2001. The demise of HIH is considered to be the largest corporate collapse in Australia's history, with liquidators estimating that HIH's losses totalled up to AUD $5.3 billion. Investigations into the cause of the collapse have led to conviction and imprisonment of a handful of members of HIH management on various charges relating to fraud.

Contents

History

In 1968, Ray Williams and Michael Payne formed "M W Payne Underwriting Agency Pty Ltd", which was acquired in 1971 by British company CE Heath PLC. Ray Williams was appointed to the board of CE Heath in 1980. The business operations of CE Heath were subsequently transferred to "CE Heath International Holdings Ltd" in 1989 with CE Heath PLC retaining 90% ownership of CE Heath International Holdings. In 1992, CE Heath International Holdings floated on the Australian Stock Exchange.

In 1995, CE Heath International Holdings acquired CIC Insurance Group. The remaining 48% holding that CE Heath PLC maintained in CE Heath International Holdings was sold to a subsidiary of CIC Insurance Group called CIC Holdings Limited. CIC Holdings increased its share in CE Heath International Holdings to 50% and CIC Holdings was purchased by Winterthur Swiss Insurance Company (Winterthur Swiss). In May 1996, CE Heath International Holdings changed its name to HIH Winterthur.

Through 1997 and 1998, HIH Winterthur acquired a large number of companies both in Australia and globally, including Colonial Ltd General Insurance's operations in Australia and New Zealand, Solart in Argentina and Great States Insurance Co in the United States. Most notably, however, HIH acquired the large Australian insurance company FAI Insurance, whose chief executive Rodney Adler became a director of HIH in 1999. Winterthur Swiss sold its 51% share in HIH Winterthur to the public and HIH changed its name to HIH Insurance Ltd.

Collapse

With $8 billion in assets, HIH was considered one of Australia's largest insurance firms. However, after offsetting its assets with debts and potential insurance claims against the company, HIH was left, on paper, with net assets of only $133 million. McGrath & Riddell described HIH's solvency as "marginal" and stated in their report that "an extremely small movement (just 1.7%) in the value of assets could move the balance sheet into net asset deficiency." That is, even the slightest setback would cause the company to become insolvent.

On 15 March 2001, the board of HIH appointed a provisional liquidator to take control of HIH and 17 of its controlled entities. The board hoped this would give HIH time to review its operations and assess its financial position. On the same day, HIH was to announce its first-half result for the six months to 31 December 2000. The announcement had already been delayed once and rumours suggested that HIH's first-half result was a loss of $100 million. This figure quickly ballooned to $200 million, and then $300 million. Although the result was never announced, when Tony McGrath announced his appointment as provisional liquidator he estimated that HIH had lost over $800 million over the six months to 31 December 2000. He attributed the HIH company failures to rapid expansion, unsupervised delegation of authority, extensive and complex reinsurance arrangements, under-pricing, reserve problems, false reports, reckless management, incompetence, fraud, greed, and self-dealing.

Formal winding-up orders were made on 27 August 2001. By then, HIH liquidators estimated the deficiency of the group to be between $3.6 billion and $5.3 billion. The demise of HIH was the largest corporate failure in Australia's history. [3]

HIH insurance is currently in run–off, which means it is managing its outstanding claims and not writing any new business. On 11 April 2011 the provisional liquidator said that it could be up to 10 years before all creditors are paid. [4] [ needs update ]

Royal Commission

On 21 May 2001 Prime Minister John Howard announced that a Royal Commission would be established to inquire into the company's collapse. [4] Justice Neville John Owen headed the Royal Commission, which tabled its report to Parliament on 16 April 2003. The findings of the Royal Commission were available on the HIH Royal Commission web site which has been archived by the National Library of Australia. [5]

Criminal charges and sentences

Adler pleads guilty

Former HIH director Rodney Adler was sentenced on 14 April 2005 to 4+12 years in prison, with a non-parole period of 2+12 years. Adler's sentence came after pleading guilty on 16 February 2005 to four criminal charges, which included:

The sentence was a lenient one, since the judge accepted the defendant's plea of mitigation, citing that he had not sold any of his own shares, or personally benefitted from his actions.

Stock market manipulation

Criminal charges for stock market manipulation were laid against Adler after an investigation by the Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) into the purchase of HIH shares by Pacific Eagle Equities Pty Ltd, an Adler-controlled company. Pacific Eagle Equities purchased 1,873,661 HIH shares on 15 June 2000, 951,339 HIH shares on 16 June 2000 and 425,000 HIH shares on 19 June 2000 [6] with HIH funds after Adler persuaded Ray Williams to shift $10 million from HIH to Pacific Eagle Equities. Adler's defence team negotiated with the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions to drop charges of stock market manipulation in exchange for a guilty plea to other charges. [7]

Disseminating false information

Adler attempted to induce investors to purchase HIH shares by telling a finance journalist on 19 June 2000 and 20 June 2000 that he had purchased 1,873,661 HIH shares on 15 June 2000 and 951,339 HIH shares on 16 June 2000 for himself. [6] Adler also told the journalist that he believed the share price for HIH was undervalued and presented an opportunity for a quick profit. [7]

Intentionally acting dishonestly

In October 2000, a company in which Adler had an interest, Business Thinking Systems (BTS), was in financial trouble. Adler sought a $2 million investment from HIH. Williams had been told by Adler that the company had raised $2.5 million, which it had not, and that Adler was prepared to invest $500,000, which he had no intention of doing, if HIH invested $2 million in BTS. HIH executive John Ballhausen was then told by Adler that he had invested the $500,000. The HIH board discussed and approved the $2 million investment in BTS in a November 2000 meeting. Adler attended the meeting and failed to disclose his financial interest in the business. Nor did he disclose his knowledge of its financial affairs. [7] In April 2005 Adler was sentenced to 4+12 years in prison. [8]

On 13 October 2007 at 8:30 a.m., Adler was released from the St Heliers Correctional Centre in the Upper Hunter Valley on parole, after serving 2+12 years of his sentence. However, in November 2007, he faced court in a NSW civil case related to bonuses he recommended for executives of the failed telco One.Tel. Adler was on One.Tel's remuneration committee. [9]

Other charges

On 15 April 2005, Ray Williams was sentenced to 4 years and 6 months' jail with a non-parole period of 2 years and 9 months, after pleading guilty to misleading shareholders about the financial position of HIH. Williams was also banned from leading an Australian corporation for ten years. [10] On 14 January 2008, Williams was released from jail after serving just under three years. [11]

Sydney businessman Brad Cooper was sentenced in the Supreme Court on 23 June 2006, after a jury found him guilty on 13 charges relating to bribes he paid a senior HIH official to push through false claims in the months before the insurer's collapse. [12] He was sentenced to 8 years' jail with a non-parole period of 5 years. [13] Cooper reportedly admitted to having a cocaine addiction during his high-flying days when he worked as a motivational speaker and as a salesman. At the time he entered jail in October 2005, Australian media stated he reported to prison officials that he had further addictions to painkillers, dex-amphetamines, and was on a valium addiction program. [14] [15] Prior to his arrest, he had begun a relationship with Sascha Ricci Griffin, and she continued their relationship with visits to him in court and jail, until his release in late 2010. [16] [17] [18] Cooper filed an appeal from jail against the severity of his sentence, but the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal dismissed the application in March 2009. [12]

On 21 November 2008, it was reported that a charge had been dropped against former HIH chairman Geoffrey Cohen a week before it was due to be heard in Sydney's Downing Centre Local Court. The decision by the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions not to proceed followed a similar decision in February 2008 relating to a more serious charge. Both were laid in 2005. Both abandoned charges related to Cohen's address to shareholders at the HIH annual general meeting in December 2000. In the second charge, ASIC alleged Cohen did not take reasonable steps to ensure that the information he gave to the shareholders at annual meeting was not misleading about a joint venture between Allianz Australia Ltd (Allianz) and HIH. The first charge alleged Cohen knowingly misled investors. [19]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">One.Tel</span> Australian telecom corporation

One.Tel was a group of Australian-based telecommunications companies, principally the publicly-listed One.Tel Limited, established in 1995 soon after deregulation of the Australian telecommunications industry, most of which are currently under external administration by court appointed liquidators.

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) is an independent commission of the Australian Government tasked as the national corporate regulator. ASIC's role is to regulate company and financial services and enforce laws to protect Australian consumers, investors and creditors. ASIC was established on 1 July 1998 following recommendations from the Wallis Inquiry. ASIC's authority and scope are determined by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001.

The following lists events that happened during 2001 in Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Silverwater Correctional Complex</span>

The Silverwater Correctional Complex, an Australian maximum and minimum security prison complex for males and females, is located in Silverwater, 21 km (13 mi) west of the Sydney central business district in New South Wales, Australia. The complex is operated by Corrective Services NSW, an agency of the New South Wales Government Department of Communities and Justice.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rodney Adler</span> Australian fraudster

Rodney Stephen Adler is an Australian whose family founded the FAI Insurances group, of which he became chief executive in 1989, and which was at one stage Australia's third largest general insurer. Adler became a director of HIH Insurance after the acquisition of that company, and resigned in January 2001, two months before HIH collapsed. He was jailed in 2005 for his conduct related to the collapse of HIH, where Adler obtained A$2 million from HIH by false or misleading statements and being dishonest as a director.

John David "Jodee" Rich is an Australian businessman. He was a founder of the defunct mobile phone provider One.Tel and the software distributor Imagineering Australia. He is now the CEO and founder of social analytics and influence measurement provider PeopleBrowsr and the creator of new TLDs dotCEO, dotBest and dotKred.

The Offset Alpine fire was a 1993 fire that destroyed a Sydney printing plant owned by the company Offset Alpine Printing Ltd. Investigations of the incident by the police and by the Australian Securities & Investments Commission spanned over ten years, amid suspicions that the printing plant was burnt down as part of an insurance fraud. It also gained attention because of the high profile of individuals involved.

Peter Ross Hayes, QC, was a prominent barrister in Melbourne, Australia. He was a director of the Melbourne Football Club from 2000 to 2003.

Robert Richter is an Australian barrister, based in Melbourne. He has handled a number of high-profile cases including defendants unpopular in public opinion. He is an adjunct professor at Victoria University. He is a critic of human rights violations and advocates for the rule of law.

Raymond Reginald Williams is an Australian businessperson and corporate criminal. In 2005 he was imprisoned for a minimum of two years and nine months for filing false financial statements and failing his duty as a director. After Williams' criminal conviction, charities began removing his name from their donor plaques, and his award as Member of the Order of Australia was cancelled by order of the Governor-General.

Opes Prime Group Limited was an Australian securities lending and stockbroking firm which suffered a dramatic collapse in 2008.

<i>Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Rich</i> Civil case

Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Rich was one of the biggest civil cases in NSW Supreme Court history, in which the Australian Securities and Investments Commission accused former executive directors of One.Tel telecommunications company, Jodee Rich and Mark Silbermann, of having failed to meet their duty of care in the months leading up to the company's collapse in May 2001. The legal process ran for almost nine years, took up 232 sitting days and generated 16,642 pages of transcripts. In November 2009, the NSW Supreme Court Justice Robert Austin comprehensively dismissed ASIC's case against the Rich and Silbermann, saying the corporate regulator had failed to prove any aspect of its pleaded case against either defendant.

Firepower International was a fraudulent company that advertised as a Hong Kong-based company owned and operated by Global Fuel Technologies Ltd, specializing in technology purporting to reduce the fuel consumption and environmental impact of petrol-operated vehicles. There were other offices in Sydney, China, Rhodes, Athens and Papua New Guinea, according to the now-defunct official company website. However, "in reality it was a handful of people in an industrial estate in Perth", who were conducting a complex of fraudulent operations. The original entity—Firepower Operations Pty Ltd—was a A$1 company, first registered in December 2004, owned by Firepower Holdings Group Ltd, a company with an address in the British Virgin Islands.

Kleenmaid is an Australian owned domestic appliance brand that was originally established in 1984. In 2009 it was acquired by the private equity group Compass Capital Partners who relaunched it to the public in 2012 with a newly developed Black Krystal range of appliances and a new logo.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bridgecorp Holdings</span>

Bridgecorp Holdings Ltd is a former high-risk property development group that was operating in New Zealand and Australia. It was placed in receivership in July 2007.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jan Cameron</span> New Zealand-Australian businesswoman

Jan Cameron is a New Zealand-Australian businesswoman and formerly Australia's fourth-richest woman. She made her fortune as the founder of the Kathmandu clothing and outdoor equipment company. She currently lives in Bicheno, Tasmania. She runs various companies and business interests, which together span Britain, New Zealand and Australia. She is a philanthropist and supporter of animal welfare.

Karl Suleman was the director of KSE and all the companies within the Froggy Group. He was part of the largest Ponzi scheme in Australian history which was associated with budget internet company Froggy, fronted by Suleman and funded with the help of $300 million raised from 20,000 investors.

Elizabeth Lillian Fullerton is an Australian lawyer, specialising in criminal law, who has been a judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales since February 2007.

Melissa Louise Caddick was an Australian woman who vanished in November 2020 amid an investigation by the Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) for carrying on a financial services business without holding an Australian Financial Services (AFS) licence. Caddick vanished the day after ASIC agents and Australian Federal Police officers raided her home at Dover Heights, Sydney, on the suspicion that she had misappropriated approximately A$30 million from investors, including her friends and family, in an elaborate Ponzi scheme.

References

  1. "HIH INSURANCE LIMITED HIH - Profile ii Status". www.delisted.com.au. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
  2. "Search Results - Organisations and Business Names". connectonline.asic.gov.au. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
  3. "The Failure of HIH Insurance". 27 March 2012. Archived from the original on 27 March 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  4. 1 2 Kehl, David. "HIH Insurance Group collapse". www.aph.gov.au. Parliament House, Canberra. Retrieved 9 April 2022.
  5. "29 Mar 2014 - HIH Royal Commission - Archived Website". Trove. Archived from the original on 28 March 2014. Retrieved 9 April 2022.
  6. 1 2 "Rodney Stephen Adler charged" (Press release). ASIC. 3 December 2002. Archived from the original on 6 March 2005. Retrieved 15 April 2005.
  7. 1 2 3 Elias, David (17 February 2005). "Adler guilty on 4 charges". The Age . Retrieved 9 April 2022.
  8. "Rodney Adler sentenced to four-and-a-half years' jail" (Press release). ASIC. 14 April 2005.
  9. Muswellbrook, NSW (13 October 2007). "Rodney Adler released from jail". The Age . Melbourne.
  10. O'Brien, Natalie (14 January 2008). "Ray Williams to go free, HIH pain lingers". The Australian . Retrieved 14 January 2008.
  11. "HIH founder released from prison". News Limited. Herald Sun. 14 January 2008. Archived from the original on 5 March 2008. Retrieved 14 January 2008.
  12. 1 2 "Bradley Cooper sentenced to eight years' jail". 23 June 2006. Archived from the original on 11 December 2011. Retrieved 3 January 2012.
  13. "White collar criminals urged to heed Cooper sentence". News Online. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 23 June 2006. Retrieved 23 June 2006.
  14. "Brad Cooper, last of the HIH three, free today". The Sydney Morning Herald . 30 October 2010.
  15. "HIH fraudster walks free". The Sydney Morning Herald . 31 October 2010.
  16. Sexton, Jennifer; Phillips, Jesse (31 October 2010). "Former high-flyer Brad is uncooped". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 18 November 2012.
  17. Carson, Vanda (31 October 2010). "HIH fraudster walks free". The Sydney Morning Herald .
  18. "Pennies earned for life after jail". 29 October 2010.
  19. Sexton, Elisabeth (21 November 2008). "Charges dropped against HIH chairman". The Age .

Further reading