Pledge Me, the online crowd funding platform, has launched its first two equity offers, giving investors the chance to buy into New Zealand’s first computer museum, backed by Apple Inc co-founder Steve Wozniak, and a hovercraft ferry in the South Island. The Wellington-based crowd funder is licensed under the new Financial Markets Conduct Act, which came into effect on April 1, providing …
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Who’s on Location goes looking for cash
Wellington visitor management software firm WhosonLocation is looking to raise up to $3 million in private equity as it seeks the next phase of growth since it launched five years ago. Founder Darren Whitaker-Barnett told BusinessDesk the company, which operates in nine countries and boasts 61,000 users globally, is seeking high net worth individuals rather than an initial public offering, …
Read More »IAG mulls closing all but one of its State branches, affecting 91 jobs
Insurance Australia Group may close all but one of its 22 State branches in New Zealand a bid to consolidate its national direct insurance network as more customers phone or turn online for assistance. The Auckland-based insurer will decide in mid-October whether to close the bulk of its branches, affecting 91 jobs, as 94 percent of its customers used its website or called for …
Read More »Heartland director Gary Leech resigns to focus on City Care appointment
Heartland New Zealand director Gary Leech will retire from the lender’s board next month, after three years on the board including when the bank formed after the merger of Canterbury and Southern Cross building societies and Marac Finance. Leech will retire from the Christchurch-based lender at its annual general meeting on Oct. 31 as he looks to focus on his recent appointment to the …
Read More »Sealord says Nelson wetfish factory ‘not economically viable,’ 97 jobs at risk
Sealord, New Zealand’s second-largest fishing company, says it needs to downsize its Nelson wetfish processing plant and may eliminate 97 jobs in the face of rising costs, flat prices and a still-strong kiwi dollar. “In its current form, the wetfish factory is not economically viable, and we need to make improvements now to ensure Sealord’s ability to grow and invest in …
Read More »Tax office appeals Vector’s $53 million win on CBD tunnel
The Inland Revenue Department will appeal a High Court decison which found in favour of Vector over a $53 million payment relating to the Auckland electricity and gas network operator’s access rights to its Auckland CBD tunnel. Last month, Justice John Faire the High Court in Auckland’s declared payments made by national grid operator Transpower in relation to the underground tunnel, known as NSTC, …
Read More »Extra oil imports are organised to avoid disruption from NZ Refining strike action
Oil companies are forging ahead with a contingency plan to import more fuels into the country to minimise disruption if planned industrial action at New Zealand Refining goes ahead next month. BP external relations manager Jonathan Mills, speaking on behalf of the industry, said they were currently assessing how much fuel across all grades is being held in storage at the refinery, on …
Read More »NZ dollar drops after Wheeler says level ‘unjustified and unsustainable’
The New Zealand dollar tumbled more than half a US cent after Reserve Bank governor Graeme Wheeler invoked two of the conditions for the bank to intervene in currency markets, saying its strength was “unjustified and unsustainable” given the decline in commodity prices. Wheeler repeated the words he used in the July 24 official cash rate review in a statement titled: …
Read More »FMA got fewer complaints in 2014, had 30 open cases
The Financial Markets Authority received fewer complaints in its 2014 financial year after the David Ross Ponzi investigation sparked a flood on inquiries in 2013, and had just 30 open cases at the end of the period. The financial markets watchdog received 839 complaints in the 12 months ended June 30, down from 1,273 a year earlier when investors in …
Read More »Pacific Edge awarded Japanese patent for colorectal cancer, shares rise
Pacific Edge, the medical biotech company, has been awarded a Japanese patent for its colorectal cancer screening technology, as the company looks to expand its range of diagnostic tests internationally. The shares rose on open. The Dunedin-based biotech is looking to commercialise its Cxcolorectal test in Japan, where colorectal is the nation’s most prevalent cancer, it said in a statement. The …
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