Liberty Financial calls in JPMorgan for strategic review
Non-bank lender Liberty Financial is weighing strategic options including a listing on the ASX.
Non-bank lender Liberty Financial is weighing strategic options, including a listing on the ASX boards.
Street Talk can reveal the financial services company drafted in JPMorgan several months ago to assist with a review of the Melbourne-based business. The bank is assessing a number of options for Liberty which include an initial public offering or seeking out a private investor for the group.
Non-conforming lenders, which typically provide finance to borrowers that don't meet the criteria of the big banks, are benefiting from tougher regulatory controls around bank lending.
Liberty's profit before tax increased 11 per cent to $73.7 million for the year ended June 30 2016, as loan originations hit $2.5 billion. The lender, which began with a focus on non-conforming home loans has branched into car and business loans, and has total assets of more than $5 billion.
Still, the IPO market has been fickle this year and Liberty's opaque structure may provide challenges to a run at the ASX.
A company associated with the head of Liberty was last year ordered to repay a debt to Macquarie Group, after resisting the repayment through more than five years in litigation.
And sale conditions have also not been ideal in the trade space. Last year, non-bank lender Firstmac shelved sale plans after bankers Goldman Sachs unsuccessfully solicited interest for Queensland home loan magnate Kim Cannon's enterprise.
Liberty's board is headed by chairman Richard Longes (also chairman of Investa Office Fund and formally on the boards of GPT and Boral), while founder Sherman Ma remains an executive director after handing over the chief executive role to James Boyle late last year. Rounding out the board are former Insurance Australia Group executive Leona Murphy and former ANZ Banking Group executive Peter Hawkins.
US-born Ma came to Australia in the 1990s with management consultancy McKinsey & Co and launched Liberty in 1997, backed by silent partners.
Four years ago, his wealth was estimated at $100 million by the BRW Young Rich List.
It also isn't the first time Liberty has considered listing on the ASX. Prior to the global financial crisis, Ma drafted in banks to weigh options including an IPO. Those plans were derailed by the fallout of the GFC which saw the domestic non-conforming loan industry seize up, in line with global markets.
Lenders such as Liberty and rival Bluestone stopped writing loans during that period.
This column understands Bluestone is undertaking its latest securitisation transaction at an offer size of $250 million to take advantage of improved funding conditions.
The Sapphire XVI deal is being arranged by Macquarie while Commonwealth Bank of Australia is also on the ticket.