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Sasko Lazarov/Photocall Ireland
shut up shop
These are the people behind the deal that means time's up for Clerys
The store was put into liquidation on Friday by its new owners.
3.59pm, 16 Jun 2015
39.7k
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WHEN MANY CLERYS staff turned up to work on Friday they thought they were about to be briefed on the iconic department store’s new ownership to a previously unknown company, Natrium.
After much speculation about Clerys fate, Gordon Brothers Europe – the local restructuring arm of the Boston-based Gordon Brothers Group – announced on Friday it had completed the Clerys sale to the Natrium consortium.
That was done through the transfer of the department store’s parent company, OCS Investment Holdings.
According to the last accounts filed for that company, to the start of February last year, it had about €21.2 million of cash at hand, but debts of over €23.6 million due within 12 months.
It also had long-term debts of €20.9 million, which including bank debts of €15.6 million. Those loans were originally to fall due at the end of the year but they were extended by agreement to September 2016.
However the prime real estate site on O’Connell St and the store’s day-to-day operations were tied up in two separate forms - OCS Properties and OCS Operations.
The operations company recorded a loss of over €2 million for the previous 12 months, while the property company booked a profit of just under €5 million.
It was OCS Operations, which was set up in August 2012 when Gordon Brothers took over the business, that was put into liquidation on Friday, spelling the end for the Clerys department-store business and the jobs of the 460 workers based there.
Its last accounts, also to February last year, noted it was sitting on net current assets of over €2 million at the time and the figures were prepared on a “going-concern basis” because of the loan repayment restructure.
This should enable the company to meet its debts as they fall due,” the accounts said.
As recently as September 2013, Gordon Brothers said it wasn’t considering selling the business, with its European head Frank Morton telling the Irish Independent it was focussed on opening for Christmas after flooding hit the store.
Meanwhile OCS Properties, also set up in August 2012 during the takeover, remains in business.
In February last year it was sitting on total assets of over €20 million. It has been suggested the store could now be turned into anything from a hotel to a luxury mall.
Natrium, a joint venture between the firms D2 Private and funds controlled by London-based Cheyne Capital Management, has yet to file any accounts as it was only incorporated two weeks ago. Cheyne also has offices in New York, Switzerland and Bermuda.
Natrium’s directors are Deirdre Foley, 43, John Skelly, 47, and Ronan Daly, 48, who all have addresses listed in Dublin.
Deirdre Foley
The two men are the directors of a string of other companies including several Cheyne investment funds, while UCD graduate Skelly is also the director of investment firm the Carne group, which has operations in Dublin, London, Luxembourg and the Channel Islands among other locations.
Foley has a long-running history in the Irish property industry including several years with Quinlan Private, the investment vehicle of developer Derek Quinlan.
Derek Quinlan Dominic Lipinski / PA Archive
Dominic Lipinski / PA Archive / PA Archive
She left the company before it began to fold under a mountain of debt during the financial crisis.
Quinlan, who left Ireland for Switzerland and then Abu Dhabi, at one stage owed Anglo Irish Bank and other lenders an estimated €3.5 billion through various arms of his empire.
Foley is now the sole owner of D2 Private, which she set up in 2005 with developer David Arnold.
It was also hit during the financial crisis as property prices plunged. The firm and a consortium of investors including former Anglo Irish Bank chairman Sean FitzPatrick lost a reported €72 million on the sale of London’s Woolgate Exchange Building in 2012.
London's Woolgate Exchange Building
According to D2′s website, Foley has been directly and indirectly involved in property deals worth about £3 billion.
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@Padraig O’Brien: is it any wonder our political cast haemorrhage money? They think there are more than are 4 quarters in a hole. (its not a misspell) Obviously maths isnt a strong point with them. Calling an area a quarter doesn’t make it better, a bit like university hospital dosent mean its a hospital. Our “cultural quarter” is an over priced tourist trap with little more than pubs and diddly music and an occassional gallery.
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