It appears that the operators of the Margate’s prestigious Dreamland
Amusement Park face the possibility of going bust in just over a week’s time. According to a notice published in the London Gazette on 20th
July. The administrators of Sands
Heritage, Duff and Phelps Ltd, have called a meeting of the company’s creditors
on Monday 4th at 10am at their offices in the Shard, central London.
At that meeting Duff and Phelps will be presenting a Statement of Proposals to the creditors about how Sands
Heritage intends to repay a massive £2.9
million debt, run up in less than one years trading. I have been contacted by well placed people who have told me that the Duff and Phelps Statement of Proposals
will make difficult reading for Sands creditors. I understand that It’s likely that the Proposals will say that Sands Heritage is extremely unlikely
to be able to trade itself out of trouble and that a repayment offer as low as
20p in the pound might be made to the creditors.
I’m led to believe that It’s highly unlikely that the
creditors will accept Duff and Phelps proposals and that a petition for the
liquidation of Sande Heritage will quickly follow which could result in the
sale of many of the Dreamland Amusement Park assets including some of the fairground rides and lots
of equipment and hardware.
But my biggest worry is the future of the 100 year leasehold of the Dreamland Amusement Park. On
27 May 2016 Sands Heritage borrowed £600,000 from offshore , Cayman Islands
registered, Arrowgrass Master Fund Ltd.
Security for the loan is the 100 year leasehold agreement with Thanet Council. If Sands default on loan
repayments to Arrowgrass Master Fund, which will happen if they are liquidated,
then the 100 leasehold agreement on Dreamland will be become the property of
the Arrowgrass.
I previously posted that the Directors of Sands Heritage have close connections with
the owners of the Arrowgrass Master Fund
Ltd, Arrowgrass Capital Partners LLP, with Mr Nick Connington a director having
worked with them for 4 years. See my previous post about this here
Well researched Ian. It is like watching a train crash in slow motion then noticing some Cayman recovery trucks already parked conveniently nearby.
ReplyDeleteWell done Ian - and concerning the Live Animal Exports too - a rather feeble protest by KAALE etc with only 20 police and 6 port staff. Is it true 10 more shipments are planned?
ReplyDeleteJust 13% turnout in the latest TDC election for Cllr Potts?
ReplyDeleteDreamland bust now Pleasurama and a £500k EU fraud investigation. Are TDC worth funding: a lot of senior salaries and pensions for nothing?
ReplyDeleteWho at TDC approved the Manston development: 200 house in 1st phase?
ReplyDelete