B. Factual Background
4 The following factual background is taken from the affidavit of Mr Hansell sworn on 8 November 2023. For present purposes, it is sufficient to note the following.
5 On 17 October 2023, the Administrators were appointed following a resolution of the Company's directors, pursuant to s 436A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (Act). The Company operates a well-known business, which manufactures and sells frozen desserts under the "Sara Lee" brand. It has operated for 25 years. The Company's products are principally sold through large retailers in Australia and New Zealand. Some products are also resold by export agencies throughout Southeast Asia and the Middle East.
6 As at the date of the Administrators' appointment, the Company had 208 employees. The Company manufactures its products from a property that it leases at 88 Railway Crescent Lisarow, New South Wales, from Certane CT Pty Limited (Certane). The Company has continued to occupy and operate the manufacturing facility at the property during the administration. The Company's principal creditors are IFM Investors Pty Ltd (IFM), which is owed $65,410,429.12, and the National Australia Bank Limited (NAB), which is owed $1,810,886.80. Each of those creditors has security interests over the Company's assets, with NAB's security having priority to IFM's security. To date, neither IFM nor NAB have taken any step to enforce their security.
7 Turning then to address the remaining creditors of the Company, creditors with security interests registered on the Personal Property Securities Register, typically in the nature of retention of title arrangements, are owed to $2,107,693.84. Employees of the Company are owed, by way of pre-appointment liabilities, a figure of $2,632,229.81. The lessor of the property, Certane, is owed $945,714.43 for pre-appointment unpaid rent and outgoings. Finally, I note that unsecured creditors are owed an amount in aggregate of $14,112,334.21.
8 The Company's assets consist of plant, property and equipment, debtors, finished goods, raw materials and packaging, intangibles and goodwill. The main asset of the Company is the underlying business and the associated goodwill in the "Sara Lee" brand.
9 The Administrators have identified, on a preliminary basis, the following reasons for the Company's entry into administration (a) trading losses caused by unforeseen challenges faced by the Company, including the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, macroeconomic factors, and natural disasters, in particular flooding, (b) issues with major suppliers, (c) excessive senior debt owing to both IFM and NAB, and (d) insufficient liquidity to make investments and changes within the business to deal with these challenges. The Administrators have formed the view that the Company is presently insolvent.
10 It follows that, in the absence of any extension to the convening period, it is likely that the creditors will resolve to wind up the Company. The Administrators have commenced a process for the sale or restructuring of the assets and business of the Company (sale process). That sale process contemplates a completion of the process by early to mid-February 2024. The Administrators, however, seek an extension to 14 May 2024, because of the potential for the need for conditions precedent to be satisfied, potential approval that might need to be obtained by a major trade buyer from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, the potential need for an international buyer to require Foreign Investment Review Board approval, and to provide a buffer in the event that the sale process takes longer than anticipated.
11 The benefit to creditors, and the Company more generally, of an extension beyond early to mid-February 2024, is that it provides further flexibility to the Administrators and significantly avoids the costs that may otherwise be incurred in having to make a further application for an extension of the convening period if any sale cannot be completed by mid-February 2024. The Administrators are currently optimistic as to the prospects of a successful sale of the business as a going concern given the interest that the Administrators have received to date in a potential sale or restructure of the assets of the Company.
12 Further, and significantly, the Administrators have kept key stakeholders informed of the proposal to extend the convening period for the second meeting of creditors by six months. The secured creditors, both NAB and IFM, have confirmed to the Administrators that they either consent or do not oppose the application for the extension. The lessor, Certane, and the United Workers Union, which is the registered trade union which represents the employees of the Company, have also expressed their support to the Administrators for the extension of the convening period.
13 Finally, I note that, at the first meeting of creditors, the proposed application for a six-month extension of the convening period was explicitly foreshadowed to creditors, and no opposition was expressed by any creditor to the proposed application. In addition, immediately following their appointment, the Administrators met with the Company's employees and notified them of the proposed application for an extension of the convening period, and no opposition was expressed to that proposal.