A drive to establish white farmers from SA throughout the African continent has commenced.
R37m too little
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Wed, 29 Oct 2008 16:27
The opulent Cape Town headquarters of the Fidentia group attracted
bids totalling R37.4-million at an auction on Wednesday.
However it is uncertain whether the group's curators will accept the
offers, which one of them, Dines Gihwala, said afterwards were far
lower than they had expected.
"Consider the widows and the orphans," he called out as the bidding
reached a climax in a city hotel.
The three-storey head office building at Waterford Place in the
upmarket Century City development began at R15-million, and within
minutes closed to a phone bidder at R34.5-million, a sum which excludes
the ten percent commission of auctioneers Auction Alliance.
Auctioneer Rael Levitt had sought to start the bidding at R50-million.
The building includes a gym, a library, a business centre with fully
fitted bar, an auditorium, what the auctioneers described as a "triple
volume entrance hall", and a fishpond.
Free
koi
Levitt joked he would throw in a free koi for the successful bidder.
"Many years ago we sold all [fraudster] Jurgen Harksen's koi fish,
and kept one for this special occasion," he said.
He told reporters afterwards that the top bidder was a "big property
investor from Cape Town" who did not want to be identified.
The Sycodeli, a smaller building next door to the head office that
was used as a canteen for Fidentia staff, went for R2.9-million
excluding commission.
The top bidder was a consortium of three people from Cape Town —
again asking anonymity — who wanted to open a delicatessen there.
Gihwala said he was "very unhappy" with the bids and that he and his
fellow-curator George Papadakis had been looking for closer to R60-million.
He said they would discuss the offers with the Financial Services
Board, and then "take a view on it".
In terms of the final curatorship order granted by
the Cape High
Court in March last year, any disposal of Fidentia assets must be
approved by the board.
It was possible that the curators would negotiate with the bidders
in an attempt to get a better deal, he said.
Gihwala said the greatest victims of the Fidentia affair were widows
and orphans, and if buyers were magnanimous and willing to pay more,
they would in essence be making a contribution to that cause.
"Every rand matters"
"Every rand matters to them," he said.
Papadakis said the Century City properties were Fidentia's main
assets, along with the Sante health centre in the Cape Winelands.
The curators were negotiating with possible buyers for Sante, and a
deal could be concluded by the end of the year.
Fidentia boss Arthur Brown is currently out on bail on a string of
fraud and theft charges related to the alleged misappropriation of
funds under Fidentia's control.
The cash
included funds meant for widows and orphans who were
dependents of the Living Hands trust.