UPDATE: RA say they were blindsided over Rebels' finances, reject private consortium claim as administrator backs club's survival

By Mark Drummond / Expert

The Melbourne Rebels may have traded while insolvent for more than five years, giving rise to potential breach of director duty claims for the $16.8 million in debts incurred since then, according to a report released by the club’s administrators.

In his long-awaited report to Rebels creditors owed a total of $23.1 million, administrator Stephen Longley concludes: “My preliminary view is that the Company may have traded whilst insolvent from 31 December 2018, and that it is likely that all debts that remain unpaid were incurred which could result in an insolvent trading claim exceeding $16.8m.”

The 111-page report released on Wednesday, a copy of which has been obtained by The Roar, reveals that in the last three calendar years, the Victorian Super Rugby club incurred operating losses of $5 million (2021), $5.3 million (2022) and $5.7 million (2023). During those three years, player and employee salaries alone exceeded the Rebels’ income by a collective total of about $4 million.

The administrator noted in his report those operating losses far outweighed the claims the Rebels board had made against Rugby Australia over those three years for alleged underpayments, stating: “Even if the claims of underfunding totalling $7.6 million the Directors believe the Company has against RA … are added back for this period, the Company still would have reported accumulated losses totalling $8.5 million over the last three years.”

>>READ THE FULL REPORT HERE

However, rather than placing the Rebels into liquidation to pursue those insolvent trading claims against directors and to pursue RA in the courts, the administrator has instead recommended creditors accept a settlement proposal put forward by an “Investor Group” said to involve “the directors, Leigh Clifford AC, and a group of high net worth individuals.”

Tuaina Tualima Lukhan Salakaia-Loto, Jordan Uelese, Sam Talakai and Rob Leota of the Rebels during the round four Super Rugby Pacific match between Melbourne Rebels and Queensland Reds at AAMI Park, on March 15, 2024, in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images)

“I am of the view that the likely return to creditors under the proposed Deed will provide a materially better outcome for creditors than a winding up,” Longley stated.

The report was welcomed by the private consortium which said in a statement: “The Administrator strongly rejected Rugby Australia’s threats to liquidate the Melbourne Rebels which would have dealt a massive blow to Rugby’s future in Victoria.”

The group’s spokeswoman Georgia Widdup said the Rebels Directors have “twice put offers to Rugby Australia to resolve this and received absolutely no engagement from them.

“We have offered to meet with RA to take them through our proposal in detail. They chose not to take us up on that offer.”

Earlier this week the RA chairman Daniel Herbert cast a large shadow over the future of the club.

“It is more about the financial viability of the franchise,” Herbert said.

“We are not in a position to pay a lot of money into an entity at the moment. It is effectively the game’s money. Putting money into something that is continually loss-making, and there is no evidence that can – I guess – change in the future. It is taking money away from other franchises, community rugby, women’s rugby and everything else.”

Rugby Australia responded to the administrator’s report and Rebels press release with a statement of their own (See the full statement at the bottom of the page).

“RA maintains that the true financial state of (the Rebels) has not been disclosed to RA for some time – it was only once the company defaulted on its payment plan with the ATO last December that RA was made aware of the full state of the MRRU situation,” the statement said.

“In addition, RA has not been advised by the former MRRU directors that they are subject to Director Penalty Notices from the ATO.

“Despite multiple requests from RA, the MRRU directors have failed to provide any viable proposal or business plan regarding the future of the Melbourne Rebels.

“Contrary to the former directors’ statement, RA met with the former directors at their request in March to discuss a potential resolution. Despite RA’s request for a proposal, no fully-formed proposal was provided by the group.”

Longley said another factor influencing his recommendation for creditors to accept the DOCA was that the directors had advised him they intended to “vigorously defend any claim for insolvent trading brought against them” by a liquidator and had “provided details of alleged claims against RA that may form part of their defence against any allegations of trading whilst insolvent.”

Likewise, the administrator said RA had advised “they intend to defend any claims issued against them.”

“Legal proceedings can be long and drawn out,” Longley cautioned. “Litigation carries with it the risk of an uncertain outcome and can be expensive. Accordingly, there is a genuine risk that the recovery action for insolvent trading claims and the RA claims will not be successful.

“An appointed liquidator will be unfunded. Accordingly, a liquidator would require litigation funding in order to pursue the insolvent trading claim and RA claims.”

What’s more, if creditors accepted the DOCA proposal put forward by the directors, the “Investor Group” would provide funding to pursue the $8.5 million in legal claims against RA, thus potentially generating an additional return.

“Litigation funders generally require a significant share of the proceeds of any judgement as a condition of funding the litigation. In the Deed scenario, the Deed Proponents will provide funding to pursue the RA claims without the requirement to pay a funding premium to litigation funders in event that the deed administrators consider there is a commercial benefit in pursuing these claims.”

The DOCA settlement offer put forward by the directors to prevent the club going into liquidation comes with two big catches – the first with major ramifications for the RA board as it contemplates Monday’s annual general meeting which looms as something of an acid test for the future of Australian rugby. That condition is that RA confirms in writing that the Rebels’ so-called participation rights to continue playing in Super Rugby continue for a further two years.

In his report, the administrator noted “the Director’s position is that the Company either continued to have the right to field a team under the previous Participation Agreement or has a legal basis to have its licence reinstated as they allege the Company lost its licence in unconscionable circumstances.”

“The Participation Agreement expired on 31 December 2023 but contained terms that RA was to extend the Participation Agreement by 2 years if the Company had (amongst other things) complied with all its obligations under the Participation Deed. RA has informed me that its position is that the Company did not comply with all its obligations under the Participation Deed and accordingly the Participation Deed was not extended. The Directors do not agree with this position.”

During that two-year period, the Clifford-led investor group would “make available to the company initial funding (together with a binding commitment to provide additional funding) sufficient to allow the Melbourne Rebels Rugby Union to operate in the ordinary course business.”

The second condition was that the Australian Taxation Office agree to release the Rebels directors from personal director penalty notices totalling $7.8 million issued in November 2023.

Meanwhile, apart from the potential legal claims against the directors and RA, Longley noted in his report that a liquidator could pursue addition legal claims to recover $671,171 in so-called “unfair preference payments” made to four creditors in the six months prior to his appointment in January 2024 and another $239,498 in “unreasonable director related transactions.”

“These transactions would be further investigated in the event that a Liquidator is appointed. Creditors should note than in order for a payment to be preferential in nature, a liquidator must prove, amongst other things, that a company was insolvent at the time the payment was made. I do not consider this would be an issue for these claims and I consider that the prospects of recovery would be high.”

In his summary, the administrator stated the club’s financial failure appeared to be the result of:

It went on to state the directors’ explanation for the Rebels’ financial difficulties were:

The administrator’s independent opinion of the same included:

Rugby Australia’s full statement of response

Rugby Australia (RA) acknowledges the findings of the Administrator’s report regarding Melbourne Rebels Rugby Union Pty Ltd (Administrator Appointed) (MRRU) issued to the company’s creditors.

RA continues to solely fund and operate the Melbourne Rebels Club and its teams to ensure participation in the 2024 competitions. We have done so since the company was placed into Voluntary Administration (VA) by its former board of directors in January.

For clarity, RA remains a creditor of the MRRU. We also welcome the positive news that MRRU employees are to receive full payment of their entitlements under the proposed Deed of Company Arrangement (DOCA).

RA notes the public statement made by the former directors of MRRU in response to the Administrator’s report. The Administrator has not made comment on the strength of the claims of the former directors of MRRU and has attributed no value to those claims.

The Administrator’s report suggests that MRRU and its former directors have been trading whilst insolvent since at least 2018. Given the seriousness of the conduct of the MRRU directors, the Administrator has made a report to ASIC.

RA notes Section 7.2 of the report specifically states that MRRU’s financial difficulties are not due to RA’s lack of funding, but rather MRRU’s trading losses, lack of alternative funding, excessive costs and insufficient non-RA revenues.

RA has complied with all its contractual obligations to MRRU. This includes the payment of all funding (which is subject to an agreement signed under authority by two MRRU directors on behalf of the MRRU Board) and also paying all applicable PAYG amounts to MRRU, who misused these funds and did not pay them to the ATO, which was the intended purpose.

RA maintains that the true financial state of MRRU has not been disclosed to RA for some time – it was only once the company defaulted on its payment plan with the ATO last December that RA was made aware of the full state of the MRRU situation.

In addition, RA has not been advised by the former MRRU directors that they are subject to Director Penalty Notices from the ATO.

Despite multiple requests from RA, the MRRU directors have failed to provide any viable proposal or business plan regarding the future of the Melbourne Rebels.

Contrary to the former directors’ statement, RA met with the former directors at their request in March to discuss a potential resolution. Despite RA’s request for a proposal, no fully-formed proposal was provided by the group.

RA remains committed to Rugby in Victoria, and will continue to actively consult with relevant stakeholders, as well as our legal and financial advisors regarding next steps. We will confirm our position on the future of the Melbourne Rebels Club in due course.

The Crowd Says:

2024-04-29T02:44:03+00:00

Bliksem

Roar Rookie


You have a point, no argument from me.

2024-04-29T02:30:51+00:00

SGrey

Roar Rookie


"I believe that RA should ask for private ownership tenders for the Rebels , Tahs , Reds and Brumbies , they need to run and fund their own competition." Great idea, just not sure there is private ownership appetite [beyond Force]? RA has been funding the majority of the SR Franchises losses. The model is very different to NH Rugby - for example England Rugby Premiership top 6 Teams turnover more than GBP 20mio [$40 mio AUD] each - and they still lose GBP 3-5 mio per year - of course if those NH Clubs cut their costs by 10% [or increased turnover] they would be close to breakeven - the same can't be said about the Australian SR Franchises with declining attendances, and shrinking sponsorship.

2024-04-28T19:23:24+00:00

mjseesred

Roar Rookie


Okay only if it is applied in the same way to the Tahs. There first bail out happened in 93. The Pacific Rugby championship was going to be cancelled until the ARU gave a financial bail out to the Tahs. 30 years on and they handed the licence back to RA due to financial difficulties. And talk about fair weather support. That’s 30 years of financial mismanagement. Cancel the rebels and the Tahs and strengthen the 3 existing teams perfect.

2024-04-28T12:42:12+00:00

Bliksem

Roar Rookie


Maybe we need to admit that there is no sustainable financial model for the Rebels in Melbourne. You can’t build a rugby franchise on good weather support, you need to be financially viable when you loose as well and not only when you win.

2024-04-28T08:13:14+00:00

Charlie Mackay

Roar Rookie


I made it to your comment!! :thumbup:

2024-04-28T06:14:14+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


According to an article in the AFR Widdup is Crawford's daughter. So it is a total bailout, a fraud on Victorian rugby supporters. I don't think the directors have any defense against insolvent trading and the ATO DPNs, or any real claim against RA and its directors. A standard approach on insolvency, early intervention is usually the only chance to avoid it. The first clear signal that there was no future was RA's PE hopes falling through. I have no doubt RA will have made some representations about a bailout with PE money came through. At that point if Crawford turned up with $10m then he could probably have funded settlements in full with the Government and ATO (say 50% of total), paid employee liabilities and other creditors, subordinated the directors loans and had working capital in the bank. He probably could have put in less and negotiated harder with the ATO and government. None of them deserve any sympathy.

2024-04-28T04:21:38+00:00

mjseesred

Roar Rookie


One question you are not asking is who made the commitment two years ago from RA to the Rebels after ATO rejected the payment plan. A cowboy Chairman possibly?

2024-04-28T04:16:36+00:00

mjseesred

Roar Rookie


I think there plan was with the Force being axed and them picking over the bones (Wessel as coach and all the players) they would boost their standing in the SR, bring the fans in and trade their way out over the next two to three years. COVID hit and the plan went to poo. Once down the path they kept spending more on players and the team with the view of it will finally turn around we will be right. I think RA need to hold their ground and go back out to market to issue a new licence, no existing directors can be involved.

2024-04-28T04:00:29+00:00

Waza!

Roar Rookie


I wonder if anyone will read the preceding war and peace novel of comments and get to mine :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing: I believe that RA should ask for private ownership tenders for the Rebels , Tahs , Reds and Brumbies , they need to run and fund their own competition. Do not persist with the present model , it has perpetuated consistent shortcomings and failures. RA should focus on Wallabies , Wallaroos , Aussie Sevens , Pathways , Coaching Development and Financial Assistance to Community Rugby. The big gap in Australian Rugby is the transition to Super Rugby. This foundation is key to player and coaching success at the professional level. I can see that the Super Teams don’t have the resources to develop the domestic tier three teams in the Shute Shield, Hospital Cup etc. they struggle with their own academies. The management at state level is severely under resourced and needs considerable help. Put the work in where we will see the best possible outcomes in performance and funding. Profoundly reduce the development resources needed to be an effective , professional rugby player or coach. Have a much larger pool of high quality players and coaches ready to step up and contribute from day one if selected. RA get out of Super Rugby’s way , your impeding its potential and success , please refocus your efforts. Cheers ????

2024-04-28T02:03:17+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


Aren’t they obligated to provide five? In my mind that is why RA should be far more proactive on financial matters. It probably suits the franchises for RA to have kept a distance, but it is stupid of RA. For decades franchises have been going broke and been bailed out by RA because they have to field a certain number of teams. I wrote to them in 2014 about this. At the time the NRL was dealing with one profitable club, four insolvent ones, and every other club continually making losses. They consciously set out to eliminate that problem. It is true that a mountain of money has eliminated that problem, but my long experience is that windfalls don’t show up if you do not have any intent. One curiousity for me has been the continued involvement of Widdup, albeit there could have been lots of reasons. I just read in the AFR that Widdup is Clifford’s daughter. If true then they have lost all credibility with me, and probably a lot of other people. I don’t think he should have to bail out 100% but the current offer can now only be viewed as completely cynical. Any subsequent offer requires a greater commitment to creditors, the wiping out of director loans, and a far greater commitment to Victorian rugby. The ATO and RA should be held in contempt if they agree to it.

2024-04-27T22:08:09+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


So, rugby fans should spend less time obsessing about Wallaby form and those immediately responsible and more time focused on the books of provincial teams! Yeah, sure W., the former even got in the way of the latter. I guess you can't see how crazy that argument is. Sometimes a break from the Roar can help regain perspective.

2024-04-27T10:43:36+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


Agreed that it looks quite messy. I suspect that the $8m profit last year was the reversal of $1.7m grants (RA expense and SR income) turning them into prepayments (now apparently converted to loans) times 5.

2024-04-26T11:48:00+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


I would not put the Force name anywhere near anything to do with the Rebels and the situation they have made for themselves.

2024-04-26T11:34:59+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


It is best to have nothing to do with the Rebels adminstration. You can still have 5 teams without the Rebels. Only a mad man would willingly go into business with this bunch.

2024-04-26T11:31:37+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Simple, RA see no future in the Rebels or any trust in the people running it. This rescue package is certainly not the gift you think it is. RA has nothing to do with the Rebels and their debt. They can simply assign the SR licences to another team. The Rebels debt is the Rebels debt.

2024-04-26T10:52:37+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


We could all do with a billionaire and his companies covering each of our SR teams. Would be nice. A sporting consortium would be interesting but not with the Rebels adminstration connected to it.

2024-04-26T10:40:10+00:00

Ruckin' Oaf

Roar Rookie


;)

2024-04-26T10:37:34+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


They have been loosing $5+m a year while being in the bottom three of the Super Rugby ladder..... And you think RA needs to change their approach. Laughable.

2024-04-26T10:33:25+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Yes you would not start a new teams in a third tier Scotland rugby comp that has no TV deals... RA get money for having a 5th team, might be something you don't realise but the entire model is based around TV deals agreements...more games means more money....yes it will cost money to start a new brand, but it is not going to be an upfront $23m plus the 2025 operational costs that are $6m over revenue not to mention having significant ATO debt. The other SR teams have managed to work within the Salary cap so no idea why you think the Rebels are special and shouldn't have to. And now you have completely lost my interest when you start justifying that new people would have to learn the market....this has got to be you trolling...you are somehow trying to justify keeping the people who have delivered zero success and run the Rebels into $23m debt.....sure mate, sounds like a bunch worth investing in....

2024-04-26T09:37:37+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Yes it is their fault because they made to attempt to distribute the talent to either the Rebels or Force which why for a decade they wallowedin bad results until this year, making it very hard to sell tickets and survive financially.

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