Potential oppression claims relating to the Churchill and Beat Offers, the Confirmation Letters, the Forbearance and Funding Deeds, Project Barton, the bookbuild process, and the Entitlement Offer
- Enares contends that it may be entitled to bring a claim for relief against Moula and Beat for oppression under ss 232 and 233 of the Corporations Act on the following grounds: [174]
1. the actions of Moula in preferring the Beat Offer and losing the opportunity of the Churchill Subscription Proposal, the decision to not negotiate further with Churchill, and the resolution to approve the Beat Offer and not to implement the Churchill Subscription Proposal, constituted conduct that was contrary to the interests of the Shareholders of Moula as a whole and/or oppressive to, unfairly prejudicial to, or unfairly discriminatory against Enares and the other shareholders (other than Beat and the Founders);
2. depending on their terms, the Confirmation Letters and the Forbearance and Funding Deeds may constitute an arrangement between the Founders and Beat that is not in the interests of Moula or its Shareholders as a whole, or is oppressive to the Shareholders of Moula other than the Founders and Beat;
3. the promotion of the demerger on the terms set out in the Project Barton EM and Project Barton Resolution was not in the interests of Shareholders as a whole, and was oppressive to Shareholders of Moula other than Beat and the Founders, including because:
1. the proposed demerger would have given Beat effective control of the Board, management, and operations of Moula, notwithstanding that Beat would not have been a majority Shareholder;
2. the effect - and likely purpose - of the proposed demerger appeared to be to separate the interests of Beat from the interests of the Founders, and to promote their respective interests rather than the interests of Moula or its Shareholders as a whole; and
3. if implemented, the demerger would have reduced the value of the shares held by Shareholders other than Beat and the Founders, and made it difficult or impossible for those Shareholders to sell their shares in Moula for fair value;
1. the conduct of Moula's affairs since mid-2021 has not been in the interests of Moula or its Shareholders as a whole, and has been (and remains) oppressive to Shareholders other than Beat and the Founders, because the conduct of Moula's affairs in that period has been dominated by a dispute between Beat and the Founders and by proposals formulated by them to separate their respective interests;
2. the bookbuild process undertaken in December 2022 was not in the interests of Shareholders as a whole, and was oppressive to Shareholders of Moula other than Beat and the Founders, because:
1. it had the purpose and/or effect of enabling Beat and certain other Shareholders to increase their shareholding in Moula, while diluting the shareholding of other Shareholders, including Enares;
2. it was not consistent with the terms of the Convertible Note Deed, and may have been in breach of that Deed;
3. it was affected by an information asymmetry, in that Beat had access to greater information than other bidders - including Enares - at the time of placing bids in the bookbuild process; and
4. it resulted in a significant dilution of Enares' shareholding and a significant increase in Beat's shareholding at a price substantially less than the price indicated by the EY Valuation in November 2021;
1. the Entitlement Offer was not in the interests of Shareholders as a whole, and was oppressive to Shareholders of Moula other than Beat, because:
1. it had the purpose and/or effect of enabling certain Shareholders (including Beat) to increase their shareholding in Moula, while diluting the shareholding of other Shareholders (including Enares);
2. it was undertaken shortly after the bookbuild process referred to above, and is likely to have been affected by a similar information asymmetry favouring Beat;
3. it resulted in significant dilution of Enares' shareholding, and a significant increase in Beat's proportional shareholding to above 50 per cent of the issued share capital of Moula, at a price substantially less than the price indicated by the EY Valuation in November 2021; and
1. the proposed separation of Leda connected with the issue of Class A shares was not in the interests of Shareholders as a whole, and was oppressive to Shareholders of Moula other than Beat and the Founders, because:
1. it appears to have had the effect - and likely purpose - of separating the interests of Beat from the interests of the Founders, and of promoting their respective interests, rather than promoting the interests of Moula or its Shareholders as a whole; and
2. it will likely make it more difficult, if not impossible, for Enares and Shareholders other than Beat and the Founders to sell their shares in Moula for fair value.
- It is convenient to refer to this as the Oppression Claim.
- Moula accepts that Enares may be entitled to make the Oppression Claim insofar as it concerns the Churchill and Beat Offers and the Entitlement Offer.
- Beat does not accept that Enares may be entitled to make the Oppression Claim.
- In my opinion, the evidence summarised at [13]-[143] above, read as a whole, establishes that Enares may be entitled to make the Oppression Claim. The elements of the Oppression Claim summarised at [161] above are interrelated, in that each element of the alleged oppression appears to have given rise to - or at least contributed to - the matters that are alleged to constitute one or more of the subsequent elements of oppression. For example, the evidence suggests that the alleged failure to progress the Churchill Offer (including by renegotiating its terms, which may or may not have made a difference to the attitude of Mr Ma and Beat) gave rise to the circumstances in which Moula required whatever financial accommodation it received under the Forbearance and Funding Deeds. Moula's decision to enter into those deeds on the terms that it did obliged Moula to effect a demerger of its Term Loan and Moula Pay businesses. A protracted "impasse" or "strategic deadlock" about this contributed to significant decline in Moula's Term Loan portfolio, revenues, and profitability, which may have influenced the differential between the November 2021 EY Valuation and the bookbuild price established by the process undertaken in December 2022. [175] In my view, it is artificial to characterise the Oppression Claim as a series of separate claims, rather than as one claim arising from an alleged course of conduct. In my opinion, the evidence relating to that course of conduct that is before the Court in these proceedings satisfies the low threshold that Enares may be entitled to make a claim for relief on the grounds that the course of conduct was oppressive. [176]