High life, low coal price
sends Australian mining baron bankrupt
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[March 03, 2016]
By James Regan
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Rags-to-riches coal
baron Nathan Tinkler, who rode the mining boom to become Australia's
youngest billionaire before losing it all when coal prices collapsed,
has been declared legally bankrupt after failing to pay off a private
jet.
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The bankruptcy order comes 10 years after the 40-year-old scraped
together a A$1 million ($728,700) deposit for a rundown coal mine
that returned a profit of A$442 million 18 months later.
At that time, coal was at the forefront of a boom in Australian
mining, with rising orders from fast-industrializing Asia creating a
rush of development and consolidation.
Tinkler quickly parlayed a series of audacious deals into a fortune,
far removed from his days as an apprentice at one of BHP's coal
mines, where he is said to have spent much of his free time scouring
share prices in newspapers.
He had toyed with the idea of going to university, but felt he would
“fail uni (university) the same way I did high school … I was just
not cut out for hitting the books," according to a biography by
business writer Paddy Manning.
ASSET SALES
By 2012, the resources boom and Tinkler's fortune had begun to
unravel. As coal prices plummeted, Tinkler was forced to sell an
array of assets, including a beloved thoroughbred horse stud as well
as professional soccer and rugby teams based in the gritty coal
shipping town of Newcastle.
"To be honest, there aren't that many assets to chase anymore," John
Melluish, Tinkler's bankruptcy trustee told Reuters. "There's not a
lot there."
Tinkler still owes more than A$300 million to secured creditors,
including U.S. hedge fund Farallon Capital and investment bank
Credit Suisse, according to statements to the Australian Financial
Security Authority and obtained by Reuters.
Both are owed more than A$160 million according to the filing, made
on Feb 25.
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Tinkler told bankruptcy regulators he doesn't own a car and has no
retirement plan. He has with A$323,000 in credit card debt and just
A$2,000 in cash.
After splashing out big on sports cars, race horses and homes in
Hawaii, it was Tinkler's failure to come up with $2.25 million owed
on a Dassault Falcon 900C private jet that tipped him over the edge.
At one stage Tinkler was reported to be losing more than A$4 million
a day on paper as coal prices tanked and shares in his big stake in
Whitehaven Coal plummeted.
A subsequent attempt to take Whitehaven private flopped and he
eventually had to surrender his Whitehaven stake to creditors.
In December, Tinkler told Reuters he believed he could make a
comeback in coal, and said environmental opposition, as much as low
coal prices were hurting his chances.
"I've shown I can make money from coal once, and I hope I can do it
again," he said.
In October last year, Tinkler emerged as chief executive of
Australian Pacific Coal, which has agreed to acquire the majority of
a coal mine from Anglo American. He was forced to step down four
months later under Australian regulations barring bankrupt
individuals from holding corporate directorships.
(Editing by Lincoln Feast)
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