Brookfield Is in Fight Over Solar Firm Where Cash ‘Evaporated’

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(Bloomberg) — Joh. Berenberg, Gossler & Co. KG and Brookfield Asset Management Ltd. are battling over the future of GoldenPeaks, an energy company staring at collapse after borrowing $1.5 billion for European solar-power projects.

Financial Post

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Some GoldenPeaks entities filed for Chapter 11 in the US last month, with Brookfield since agreeing to provide a bankruptcy loan that amounts to more than $250 million, legal filings show. Berenberg has objected to the bankruptcy filing and the new loan, accusing Brookfield of trying to “jump ahead of structurally senior creditors” and “secretly establishing U.S. jurisdiction over these Chapter 11 petitions,” a June 25 court document shows.

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GoldenPeaks amassed energy assets in Poland and Hungary in recent years and claimed to be one of the biggest solar-power players in central and eastern Europe. Its rapid descent has rattled the lenders that funded its rise and left them trying to figure out what went wrong.

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Some units in the company unraveled “precipitously,” and liquidity “evaporated” within a matter of weeks, Edward Manning, a managing director at Alvarez & Marsal, the company’s financial and restructuring adviser, said in a court filing.

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A spokesperson for Hamburg-based Berenberg declined to comment. A spokesperson for Brookfield, based in New York with $1.1 trillion of assets under management, also didn’t comment.

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GoldenPeaks was founded by Adriano Agosti and Daniel Tain about 20 years ago. They didn’t immediately respond to emailed requests for comment. 

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The company borrowed more than $280 million of junior financing for solar projects from Brookfield at holding-company level, while Berenberg provided about $130 million of mezzanine loans to some operating units, according to court documents. That means Berenberg may rank more senior to Brookfield in the capital structure. 

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Other creditors include BayernLB, one of Germany’s biggest regional lenders, and PKO Bank Polski SA, Poland’s largest bank, they show. GoldenPeaks had also tapped debt markets through the issuance of green bonds.

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Spokespeople for BayernLB and PKO declined to comment.

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Incomplete Picture

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Founded in 2006, Malta-headquartered GoldenPeaks developed a complex corporate structure spanning 368 legal entities and raised at least $1.6 billion of debt, according to court filings. Only 40 of those entities initially filed for Chapter 11 protection, representing about $952 million of funded debt and accrued interest.

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GoldenPeaks missed a payroll cycle, prompting employees to leave, and defaulted on nearly all of its more than 20 financing facilities, Manning said. 

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The company entered Chapter 11 proceedings with only $1.1 million of cash left, he said. At the time of the filing, Alvarez & Marsal said it still lacked a complete picture of what had driven the company’s collapse. Manning cited the lack of proper financial statements, delays in closing monthly accounts and the exodus of key employees, all of which hindered his efforts to assess the group’s position.

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