

https://insolvencynotices.asic.gov.au/browsesearch-notices/n ... =mossgreen
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Global Administrator wrote:Changes at the very top at mossgreen auctions Melbourne
Most readers will be aware of this auction company. Charles Leski Auctions merged into mossgreen some years back. Followed a couple of years later by major Australian stamp auction, Gary Watson’s Prestige Philately, and Nick Anning moved across with him. And in the past year or 2, also Torsten Weller’s postal history business.
All 4 well known identities actively work for the mossgreen company, although from what I can see, Leski has no direct connection with the stamp area these days.
Mossgreen were also in the fine arts auction business and there are regular sales.
The mossgreen website until last month showed Jack Gringlas as Chairman of mossgreen, and Charles Leski as Deputy Chairman -
https://web.archive.org/web/20170714193321/https://www.mossg ... directors/
Both names are absent now on the website.
The 'Australian Financial Review' reported on August 30 -
Mossgreen is now understood to have parted company with its chairman and major financial backer, billionaire Jack Gringlas.
As reported in these pages, it has in recent times reduced staff after moving into the stamp business, and spreading its operations to New Zealand.
http://www.afr.com/lifestyle/arts-and-entertainment/art/two- ... 830-gy6xy3
The same newspaper reported earlier in August –
"Mossgreen is shedding more than a dozen staff and has sold its premises, but chief executive Paul Sumner says it is business as usual at the Melbourne-based auction house, which continues to line up sales at a frenetic pace.
Sumner says the staff restructure reflects the firm's increasing focus on single-owner collections and higher value lots following its expansion in recent years - including the merger with the Charles Leski stamp auction group in 2013, and the takeover of New Zealand's Webb's last year.
He says the job-shedding involves mainly internal support staff, though one specialist left of his own accord.
As for the sale of its premises, a refurbished cinema in Armadale that was once the home of Sotheby's, Sumner says the firm leases the building, as it does all its premises. "The new owner is someone we know well," he says.
http://www.afr.com/lifestyle/arts-and-entertainment/art/moss ... 802-gxnjgz
The AFR also published August 23 that a well-known person to many collectors and members here had left mossgreen –
"It was recently announced that Max Williamson, long-time sports specialist with Charles Leski Auctions, then with Mossgreen after the Leski merger, has now joined Leonard Joel in Melbourne.
This shows that sports memorabilia is now one of the most competitive categories on the secondary market.
"I am thrilled that Max Williamson, easily the acknowledged leading Australian expert in the sporting memorabilia area, has joined Leonard Joel," says managing director John Albrecht.
There are surprisingly few experts in this area. Over the past few decades Williamson has tapped into the tight network of collectors, which means they tend to approach him first.
"Every morning I sit down in front of the computer and go through my emails," he says. "Most are asking me the same thing … 'what's it worth?' "
http://www.afr.com/lifestyle/arts-and-entertainment/art/spor ... 823-gy24l1
I understand that many millions had been spent in recent times on the large mossgreen complex in trendy inner city ‘Antiques Alley’ Armadale. Whether Jack Gringlas owned it I am not sure, but I assumed he did. It used to be the Sotheby’s offices.
Gringlas is a Billionaire according to the AFR above, and clearly has deep pockets. He is a very active stamp collector, and I imagine that is why he was keen to see a strong stamp operation merge in to the mossgreen Fine Arts umbrella. Good to see!
I suggested to he and Charles when in Melbourne that buying Stanley Gibbons might be an idea to look into. He was not keen - “I like auctioning things, not buying companies with fixed stocks” and I can see it really was not a fit for the operation. In hindsight rather wise, as the SG share price has slumped further in the interim – sadly.![]()
Who actually owns mossgreen now, I honestly do not know, or whether they are as keen about stamps as Gringlas was. Leski, Watson, Weller and Anning are all still in situ there as far as I can see, and let’s hope things stay that way.![]()
Glen
GlenGlobal Administrator wrote:My entire feeling about mossgreen was it was absurdly overstaffed, and overcommitted re premises and location, and I voiced that view several times here and elsewhere, including the thread linked above.
:
It seemed to me Paul Sumner was the BUYER from Gringlas.BigSaint wrote:Last year Velvet, this year Mossgreen![]()
Note the registration of this business name in 2016:
Name: MOSSGREEN AUCTIONS
Registration Number:
Registered State:
Registration Date: 24/05/2016
Status: Registered
Type: Business Names
& this one too:
Name: MOSSGREEN ONLINE
Registration number:
State of registration:
Registration date: 19/05/2016
Status: Registered
Type: Business Names
Has there been some restructuring happening in the background![]()
Guess we will know in the fullness of time.
Brad
Agree with thatBigSaint wrote:GlenGlobal Administrator wrote:My entire feeling about mossgreen was it was absurdly overstaffed, and overcommitted re premises and location, and I voiced that view several times here and elsewhere, including the thread linked above.
:
You were not the only person that held that view.
Brad
When I spoke to Torsten in September, he told me that the 24% was for one sale only, the result of having two departments involved and that it was now 20%.Clive wrote:The success of their stamp auctions could not have been helped by raising the buyers' commission to 24%, which as far as I know is the highest in the country.
Plus the increasingly buyer-gouging add ons which seem to be so common.
Clive
Richard,capetriangle wrote:When I spoke to Torsten in September, he told me that the 24% was for one sale only, the result of having two departments involved and that it was now 20%.Clive wrote:The success of their stamp auctions could not have been helped by raising the buyers' commission to 24%, which as far as I know is the highest in the country.
Plus the increasingly buyer-gouging add ons which seem to be so common.
Clive
Richard
One word - overheadsClive wrote: And even if it was just the one sale, why the need to gouge buyers to that extent?
Clive
Someone here with access to company registrations data might be able to add to this info?Kevin Morgan wrote: A new company was formed in August under the name Ivanhoe Pty Ltd
Michael, Torsten sent me this hours back, and I asked him or mossgreen to post it here. As I was not going to be stupid enough to post that dream statement with MY name on it. But annoyingly he has instead asked others to do so - he sent it to you and Kevin Morgan and I, instead of posting it OFFICIALLY from mossgreen.Michael Eastick wrote: Just had a quick chat with Torsten and received the following in an email from him.
..... No vendors will lose any money in this process
Danny Jurd wrote:All the best to all for 2016. Firstly the matter, and any outstanding amounts has now been resolved.
Yeah right.Michael Eastick wrote: The company is looking forward to a very strong calendar of auction-sales that are contracted and already catalogued for the first half of 2018, starting in February.
If a new company was registered it was not called Ivanhoe Pty Ltd. That is a WA company & has been registered since 1994:ebayer wrote:Someone here with access to company registrations data might be able to add to this info?Kevin Morgan wrote: A new company was formed in August under the name Ivanhoe Pty Ltd
This is quite common actually. I am in the process of doing this with one of my family companies as all directors changed and the old "shell" is no longer required. A Voluntary liquidation can cost as little as $300. Need to do just what this Mossgreen P/L is doing, if it is in a "shell" situation.Allanswood wrote:Why would anybody go into voluntary administration if nothing is wrong, and no one will be affected or out of pocket?
GaryGJ50 wrote:This is quite common actually. I am in the process of doing this with one of my family companies as all directors changed and the old "shell" is no longer required. A Voluntary liquidation can cost as little as $300. Need to do just what this Mossgreen P/L is doing, if it is in a "shell" situation.Allanswood wrote:Why would anybody go into voluntary administration if nothing is wrong, and no one will be affected or out of pocket?
GJ50
BradKevin Morgan wrote:Regardless of any press release you may see, there are many rumours which include:
All staff, excluding directors told at 4pm on Thursday that their services were no longer required.
A new company was formed in August under the name Ivanhoe Pty Ltd
I cannot confirm the above at present
COMMON ???????GJ50 wrote:This is quite common actually.Allanswood wrote:Why would anybody go into voluntary administration if nothing is wrong, and no one will be affected or out of pocket?
ASIC wrote:
A voluntary administrator is usually appointed by a company’s directors, after they decide that the company is insolvent or likely to become insolvent. Less commonly, a voluntary administrator may be appointed by a liquidator, provisional liquidator, or a secured creditor.
Brad,BigSaint wrote:If a new company was registered it was not called Ivanhoe Pty Ltd. That is a WA company & has been registered since 1994:ebayer wrote:Someone here with access to company registrations data might be able to add to this info?Kevin Morgan wrote: A new company was formed in August under the name Ivanhoe Pty Ltd
Name: IVANHOE PTY. LTD.
ACN: 067 314 532
Registration date: 28/11/1994
Next review date: 28/11/2018
Status: Registered
Type: Australian Proprietary Company, Limited By Shares
Locality of registered office: PERTH WA 6000
Regulator: Australian Securities & Investments Commission
Brad
Global Administrator in SEPTEMBER wrote:Changes at the very top at mossgreen auctions Melbourne
Most readers will be aware of this auction company. Charles Leski Auctions merged into mossgreen some years back. Followed a couple of years later by major Australian stamp auction, Gary Watson’s Prestige Philately, and Nick Anning moved across with him. And in the past year or 2, also Torsten Weller’s postal history business.
All 4 well known identities actively work for the mossgreen company, although from what I can see, Leski has no direct connection with the stamp area these days.
Mossgreen were also in the fine arts auction business and there are regular sales.
They conducted a very well run, and very well publicised and patronised sale of the Arthur Gray “KGV” material a year or so back. Myself and many others flew in for the first sale, and it invoiced for about $A3 million - a record for any stamp auction in this country. Just beating out Phoenix’s superb offering of the Stuart Hardy Kangaroos from May 2013.
I took this photo of Charles Leski (left) and Gary Watson outside the viewing rooms.
The mossgreen website until last month showed Jack Gringlas as Chairman of mossgreen, and Charles Leski as Deputy Chairman -
https://web.archive.org/web/20170714193321/https://www.mossg ... directors/
Both names are absent now on the website.
The 'Australian Financial Review' reported on August 30 -
Mossgreen is now understood to have parted company with its chairman and major financial backer, billionaire Jack Gringlas.
As reported in these pages, it has in recent times reduced staff after moving into the stamp business, and spreading its operations to New Zealand.
https://www.afr.com/lifestyle/arts-and-entertainment/art/two- ... 830-gy6xy3
The same newspaper reported earlier in August –
"Mossgreen is shedding more than a dozen staff and has sold its premises, but chief executive Paul Sumner says it is business as usual at the Melbourne-based auction house, which continues to line up sales at a frenetic pace.
Sumner says the staff restructure reflects the firm's increasing focus on single-owner collections and higher value lots following its expansion in recent years - including the merger with the Charles Leski stamp auction group in 2013, and the takeover of New Zealand's Webb's last year.
He says the job-shedding involves mainly internal support staff, though one specialist left of his own accord.
As for the sale of its premises, a refurbished cinema in Armadale that was once the home of Sotheby's, Sumner says the firm leases the building, as it does all its premises. "The new owner is someone we know well," he says.
https://www.afr.com/lifestyle/arts-and-entertainment/art/moss ... 802-gxnjgz
The AFR also published August 23 that a well-known person to many collectors and members here had left mossgreen –
"It was recently announced that Max Williamson, long-time sports specialist with Charles Leski Auctions, then with Mossgreen after the Leski merger, has now joined Leonard Joel in Melbourne.
This shows that sports memorabilia is now one of the most competitive categories on the secondary market.
"I am thrilled that Max Williamson, easily the acknowledged leading Australian expert in the sporting memorabilia area, has joined Leonard Joel," says managing director John Albrecht.
There are surprisingly few experts in this area. Over the past few decades Williamson has tapped into the tight network of collectors, which means they tend to approach him first.
"Every morning I sit down in front of the computer and go through my emails," he says. "Most are asking me the same thing … 'what's it worth?' "
https://www.afr.com/lifestyle/arts-and-entertainment/art/spor ... 823-gy24l1
I understand that many millions had been spent in recent times on the large mossgreen complex in trendy inner city ‘Antiques Alley’ Armadale. Whether Jack Gringlas owned it I am not sure, but I assumed he did. It used to be the Sotheby’s offices.
Gringlas is a Billionaire according to the AFR above, and clearly has deep pockets. He is a very active stamp collector, and I imagine that is why he was keen to see a strong stamp operation merge in to the mossgreen Fine Arts umbrella. Good to see!
I suggested to he and Charles when in Melbourne that buying Stanley Gibbons might be an idea to look into. He was not keen - “I like auctioning things, not buying companies with fixed stocks” and I can see it really was not a fit for the operation. In hindsight rather wise, as the SG share price has slumped further in the interim – sadly.![]()
Who actually owns mossgreen now, I honestly do not know, or whether they are as keen about stamps as Gringlas was. Leski, Watson, Weller and Anning are all still in situ there as far as I can see, and let’s hope things stay that way.![]()
Glen
No one receiving good legal, tax & accounting advice puts "property" in their trading company. It is too much risk.traralgon3844 wrote:Sometimes sales of properties and equipment are to do with getting assets out of the company with the most liability. I know someone who transfers equipment out of the trading company as soon as it is paid off. His mum has a a bit of gear she doesn't know how to use. .
If the company goes pearshaped through no fault of his own, he can still make a living.
You don't know who the property was sold to, but it was someone they know well![]()
The murky world of trusts, companies, holding entities etc sometimes leave a lot to be desired when things go pearshaped. Owners and directors and the like seen to be able to carry on living the high life on velvet cushions while the creditors get screwed.
x= income, y = expenses & p = profit.erich wrote:How can they go broke charging buyers ~30% fees plus whatever they take from the seller? They very cagily do not say what percentage the seller pays to them, but I'm sure it is significant.
It was stated earlier in this thread, that that was a one-off; the BP had to be increased for that sale, "because 2 departments were involved"...sounds like a bit of a lame excuse.Graeme wrote:24%
how did this happen!
Kevin Morgan wrote:Based on my experience in the Auction business:
Let's take an average $1m sale... and assume they sell 75% of that = $750,000 Gross
Commission at 24% is another $180,000
Vendor commission varies between nil and 19.5% so say 15% as an average = $112,500
So gross profit ignoring packaging & GST = $292,500
They print and distribute 1,000 catalogues at a cost of $10 each plus postage of $5 each to 900 Australian Clients plus 100 overseas clients at $16.50 each $16,150
Rent is $450,000 p.a. so assuming 26 sales per year = around $17,250
Advertising & Promotion Industry Norm. is around 4% of turnover = $30,000
Staffing would be around 20% of turnover = $150,000
Other costs such as vehicles, rates electricity would take care of $100,000 pa easily, divided by 26 = approx $3850
23 directors on average $200k each (very conservative in today's terms when IT professionals are on $250 -$300K ) divided by 26 = $175,000 approx.
So total costs for this assumed auction would be about $465,000
A loss of $172,500
I do not know what their turnover has been, but even at $52M they would only turn a profit of $2.6M before GST & company tax. Or about 5%, which is an average dividend for most large companies.
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