CENTREBET AMONG THOSE OWED BY FAILED CLOTHING MOGUL
6 March 2009
High-flying Billabong CEO owes A$1.7 million
in gambling debts
The Australian media are all carrying the sad story of
lawyer-turned-surfwear-and-IT-entrepreneur Matthew
Perrin, who racked up A$1.7 million in gambling debts
last year before his financial world collapsed around
him.
Among the debts of the high-flying Billabong
exec is A$ 800 000 owed to Centrebet boss, Con Kafataris;
A$300 000 owed to bookie Frank Hudson and A$160 000 to
one of Victoria's biggest bookmakers, Alan Eskander.
The Sydney Morning Herald reports that Perrin has
left a A$28.2 million trail of unpaid bills to 20
unsecured creditors, including Chinese finance company
CITIC Capital, according to the statement of affairs
that he signed when he filed for bankruptcy on Tuesday.
Four of these creditors, including CITIC, were
multi-million-dollar loans secured against Perrin's
investment in a Chinese supermarket business, Global
Mart, and other property development deals that have
soured.
In 2008 Perrin faced debts of A$113
million, and just before Christmas he started selling
off assets that included racehorses. He paid back $10
million loaned by motorbike racing champion Mick
Doohan's parents and repaid margin loans to Macquarie
Bank and Adelaide Equity Finance. The newspaper reports
that this year Perrin has been living off his American
Express card and two Mastercards, racking up A$82 000 in
two months.
Most bookies have written off
Perrin's debt after learning he was bankrupt. "It's case
closed," said Sportsbet's chief executive, Matthew
Tripp, who is owed A$140 000. "We've shut the book on
it."
Perrin's gambling debts pale in comparison
to the $13.5 million he owes the Commonwealth Bank. He
borrowed the money last year against a $4.3 million
Mermaid Beach condo.
He now says all he has left
is a laptop worth A$100, a A$200 watch, A$3 000 worth of
clothes and A$30 000 cash. He also has shares worth A$1
400. His A$130 000 Mercedes coupe is sitting in a Gold
Coast car dealership.
Despite making his fortune
running a surfwear company, Perrin preferred to be down
at the racetrack, the SMH reports.
Racing
insiders said his gambling and horseracing activities
increased after he made A$66 million selling two-thirds
of his Billabong stake in 2002.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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