by EWAN LAMB
Shareholders in the 'disruptive technology' Avocet group were told in early August that funds had been secured to restore the debt-ridden former parent company Omega Infinite PLC to the Companies Register.
The news followed a private meeting between Avocet chairman Martin Frost and Omega's liquidators Begbies Traynor at which an indication had been given that the £3 million would come from the Frost family and colleagues. The cash would also allow accountants Ryecroft Glenton, former auditors of Omega, to produce overdue company accounts for 2018 and 2019 ' hopefully by the end of September 2020'.
But so far those accounts remain overdue while Mr Frost's promise at the time of legal action against the administrators of another insolvent company, Orrdone Farms Ltd. has yet to materialise.
Now a virtually identical scenario has emerged from another 'very productive' meeting between representatives of Omega's successor Gennfros Ltd. and Begbies Traynor on Thursday of last week.
Though not a director of Gennfros, Mr Frost told potential investors in the new company at the weekend that the Begbies Traynor meeting had been greatly assisted by "the promise next week of a £2.1 million share convertible loan from our new investors."
Such a sum will be small beer for the unidentified investors in Avocet's 'revolutionary' fuel additive for according to Mr Frost they are willing to inject £750 million into the business.
In his report on Thursday's proceedings Mr Frost revealed the loan meant:"Gennfros agreed to put Begbies into funds so that the Omega Infinite Plc restoration process to the Company House Register can begin; pay off certain Omega creditors especially AFS Ventures Plc (a company controlled by Mr Frost which has been in liquidation since 2015); pay Ryecroft Glenton to conclude the 2018 and 2019 audits for Omega & Orrdone; and put Gennfros Limited, and Avocet legal teams into funds so that litigation can proceed, particularly against the Orrdone Farms Limited Administrators."
In a shareholder letter to Avocet Natural Capital Ltd.'s investors in August Mr Frost provided an account of a meeting and 'convivial lunch' with Begbies Traynor, the Omega liquidators, in York.
He wrote: "The main purpose of the Friday meeting was to agree a procedure and methodology of how Omega Infinite Plc could be restored to the Company House Registrar and thereby to set down a procedure which would provide maximum cash benefit to Omega Infinite Plc shareholders.
A Begbies Traynor spokesperson said: “In line with statutory requirements, an annual report to creditors will be lodged with Companies House within two months of the first anniversary of our appointment as Joint Liquidators on 28 April 2020 and will contain all of the information that we are required to provide to creditors."
The only public indication as to the level of Omega's indebtedness has been given by Mr Frost himself.
In February 2020, some two months before a Winding Up Order was obtained from the courts, Mr Frost informed Omega investors - 650 of them held 22 million shares at that time - of management's intention to go down the insolvency route.
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