Republic Bank Ltd (Trust and Asset Management Division) on Thursday declared that Portland (Barbados) Ltd, a company controlled by Jamaican entrepreneur Michael Lee-Chin, "has defaulted on its obligations under the supplemental trust deed to pay to noteholders the final bullet payment" of US$23 million on April 30, 2024.
Republic Bank also said the failure by Portland (Barbados) to make the final bullet payment within seven business days from April 30, "constituted an event of default (as defined in the trust deed) and noteholders and/or trustees are entitled, under the trust deed, to take such enforcement actions as are permitted under the trust deed."
The seven business days is the grace period allowed in the trust deed between the parties. The grace period ended on May 9.
The note was issued on April 28, 2022, for two-year term and paid an interest rate of 8.25 per cent.
The declarations by Republic Bank, serving as the trustee for the note, came in a three-page agreement to noteholders, dated May 9. The letter was signed by Lee-Chin as director of Portland Barbados and Jennifer Dearsley as authorised signatory.
The current collateral for the US$23 million note is US$4 million in cash, as well as shares in Jamaica's NCB Financial Group (NCBFG), which were pledged with the official stock exchanges of Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago. Those shares would have been pledged by Lee-Chin, who is listed as the majority shareholder of NCBFG, as at March 31, 2024 in the company's May 9 half-year report, with a total of 1,445,299,340 shares.
On April 28, 2022, around the time the NCBFG shares were pledged, the financial holding company traded at J$111. Yesterday, NCBFG closed at J$63.70 on the Jamaica Stock Exchange, which is a decline of 42.6 per cent since the note was issued.
In the agreement, Portland Barbados also stated, "The company (meaning Portland) by signing this agreement acknowledges and agrees that as of May 9, 2024, an event of default has occured and the noteholders are entitled to exercise their enforcement and other rights under the trust."
Portland Barbados also acknowledged and agreed that by signing the agreement, it entered into a repayment plan that was agreed to by a majority of the noteholders on May 9.
The basis of the repayment plan is that the noteholders should receive payments in May, June and August.
According to the letter, Portland Barbados agreed to the following:
i) "The company (meaning Portland Barbados) to pay to the trustee the sum of US$4 million together with interest due and paybale as at April 30, 2024 on/before May 29, 2024;
ii) "The company to pay to the trustee the sum of US$4 million on/before June 15, 2024;
iii) The company to pay to the trustee the sum of US$8 million together with interest, as set out below...due and payable as at August 15, 2024 on/before August 15, 2024;
iv) "The company will pay to the trustee as part of the August payment, interest calculated at 10.25 per cent per annum, being the interest rate specified in the supplemental trust deed (8.25 per cent), plus the default rate (of 2 per cent). However, should the company default in any of its payment obligations as specified in this agreement, the company will pay noteholders interest at a rate of 12.25 per cent per annum, being the default rate (2 per cent), plus the current rate payable of 10.25 per cent."
That means Portland Barbados agreed to pay the trustee US$16 million plus interest between May 29 and August 15, 2024. The agreement continued:
v) The company (Portland Barbados) has no objection to the trustee making the following distributions between May 20, 2024 and August 15, 2024 to noteholders:
a) Distribution to the noteholders on a pro-rata basis on/before May 29 of the current cash collateral of US$4 million;
b) Distribution to noteholders on a pro-rata basis on/after May 29, 2024, of US$4 million plus interest from the May payment;
c) Distribution to noteholders on a pro-rata basis on/after June 15, 2024, of US$4 million from the June payment; and
d) Final distribution to noteholders of the remaining principal (US$8 million) and interest on/after August 15, 2024 from the August payment.
As outlined in the distribution schedule, the noteholders are due to received a total of US$20 million between May 29 and August 15. The agreement does not explain why the noteholders are due to receive US$20 million and not the US$23 million face value of the note.
Guardian Media sent a message to Lee-Chin early last Friday afternoon, informing him that it had sight of the Republic Bank agreement, quoting key elements of it and asking him to comment. He responded that afternoon to say, "I just spoke to the trustees and they said categorically that an event of default has not occurred."
Later last Friday, Lee-Chin was sent a copy of the agreement by WhatsApp and was asked to confirm whether the signature at the end of the three-page letter was his. He did not respond immediately.
On Sunday morning, Guardian Media wrote to him again, asking him to confirm that the signature was his. He requested time to be allowed to talk with the trustee, in order to discuss sending an official statement to the newspaper on the issue. Up to last night, no statement had been received.