As a drama positioning itself as Season 2 of a potential Netflix series on ASX-listed controversy, the boardroom warfare between Humm (ASX: HUM) directors is nearing an end with its Majority Directors all tendering their resignation, leaving Andrew Abercrombie as the sole member, following the failure of its sale to Latitude Financial (ASX: LFS).
Following the withdrawal of Humm’s $335m sale of Humm Consumer Finance (HCF), its buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) and cards division, the integrity of Humm’s Majority Directors (everyone except Abercrombie) has been questioned by shareholders, prompting Alistair Muir, John Wylie AC, Carole Campbell, Rajeev Dhawan and Christine Christian AO to tender their resignations.
The official party line is that the aforementioned directors “cannot remain on the Board of Directors with Andrew Abercrombie.”
It’s effectively been a no-win situation for those Directors who were outmuscled by Abercrombie’s 23% stake in Humm, voicing via a public campaign that the Latitude offer undervalued the HCF business in the hope of receiving a better offer. On the other side, the Majority Directors were desperate to see the sale proceed due to a capitulation of the BNPL sector where Christian repeatedly declared how unprofitable the division was and how it was imperative that shareholders accept the binding offer from Latitude made before global markets and the BNPL sector shat themselves.
Christian, who took over as Chair from Abercrombie in December 2021, holds just 195,000 HUM shares compared to Abercrombie’s 114,858,000, which includes purchasing $11.3 million during his campaign to back up his commentary.
The mass resignations come just 12 hours after Christian issued a letter to shareholders, providing additional commentary on the withdrawal of HCF’s sale to Latitude.