Bluestone Group
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Industry | Finance |
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Founded | 2000 |
Founder | Alistair Jeffery |
Headquarters | , England |
Key people | Alistair Jeffery (Chairman) Peter McGuinness (MD) |
Products | Residential mortgages Collections services Auto finance Financial software |
Revenue | £36 million (2021) |
£9 million (2021) | |
Website | bluestone.co.uk |
Bluestone Group is a financial services and technology business with offices in the UK and Ireland.
History
[edit]Bluestone Group was established in 2000 in Australia as a specialist residential mortgage lender. The business was founded by Alistair Jeffery, an investment banker who had worked at Goldman Sachs and Nomura Securities in London during the 1990s. The first loan was settled in December 2000, and in the following year, a modest A$50m residential loans were written.
Bluestone's first office was in Sydney's Chifley Tower. In 2001 the business moved to Clarence Street before relocating to its Sydney office to Kent Street and then to 101 Sussex Street. The business funded its early expansion with a series of private equity rounds. The first round of A$1.8m was completed in June 2000. The subscribers were primarily private investors. A further A$4m was raised in September 2001 from RMB Ventures, the Australian venture capital arm of First National Bank (South Africa). Crescent Capital and the Liberman Family invested further expansion funds in 2002, and ABN AMRO invested A$5m in 2005.[1]
Bluestone's start-up funding was provided via a A$250m warehouse line provided by Nomura International, part of the Nomura Group. Nomura exited its funding line in 2003 by syndicating its warehouse line to Barclays.
Expansion
[edit]Between 2002 and 2006, Bluestone grew strongly. The business wrote around $100m new loans in 2002, and closed its first securitisation, Sapphire I, in May 2002. Loan volumes doubled year-on-year for the following few years, with the business winning the BRW Fast 100 for the fastest-growing private company in 2004. Bluestone's revenue growth for the prior three years was an extraordinary 800%, a Fast 100 record. The following year, Bluestone was again featured in the top 10 of the Fast 100, with turnover of A$56m and an annual average growth rate of 178%.[2]
In late 2005, Bluestone concluded a major liquidity event, providing an opportunity for existing shareholders to sell down their stake or exit completely, and new investors to join. RMB Ventures, who had invested initially in 2001, exited completely, and some other shareholders sold down their stakes. The resulting block of around 50% shares in the business was acquired by ABN AMRO (and funds managed by ABN AMRO Capital), and UK fund manager Cambridge Place.[3] The transaction valued Bluestone at A$150m.[4]
In 2024, Bluestone broadened its product suite further to include a small-ticket commercial product, lending to primarily self-employed borrowers secured on retail units, office blocks, small commercial buildings and the like. In 2006, the group also developed a servicing business, Bluestone Servicing. Up until this point, the day-to-day administration of Bluestone's now-A$3b loan portfolio had been outsourced to AMS, a subsidiary of General Electric. In early 2007, this business was bought in-house, materially increasing Bluestone's gross revenues and diversifying the business away from the 'originate–securitise' model. Bluestone Servicing was awarded an Above Average servicer rating by Standard & Poors in 2008, and a Special Servicer rating of 2 (Primary Servicing 2-) by Fitch Ratings in 2009.[5]
Funding
[edit]Bluestone originated loans using shorter-term warehouse funding, provided by Nomura International, Westpac and Barclays. The warehouse lines were periodically refinanced via securitisation, a process in which portfolios of loans are sold to special purpose entities which issue mortgage-backed bonds to fund the purchase. Bluestone completed seventeen securitisations totalling over A$4.5b between April 2002 and February 2008. The Sapphire series comprised eleven Australian and four New Zealand transactions involving residential mortgages. Emerald I and II were the first securitisations of Australian reverse mortgages. Bluestone was the first issuer in Australia to have transactions rated by all three major rating agencies (Standard & Poors, Fitch Ratings and Moody's), and bonds were sold to a mix of Australasian, Asian and European investors. In 2003, Bluestone became the first lender to issue notes secured by mortgage-backed bonds to retail investors in New Zealand. The Sapphire Securities series was fully repaid in 2007.[6]
The Global Financial Crisis (GFC)
[edit]In early 2007, Bluestone employed over 200 staff and was originating around A$100m per month of residential, commercial and reverse mortgage business. The market for mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) changed radically in July 2007, the start of the Credit Crunch. From this point onwards, risk aversion in the debt capital markets increased sharply, and the RMBS market effectively shut in early 2008. RAMS, a large non-bank mortgage lender failed in August 2007, the first major casualty of the credit crunch in Australia.[7] The business had been listed on the Australian Securities Exchange just eight weeks earlier at a market capitalisation of A$880m.[8]
Bluestone was one of the last lenders to access the Australian and NZ debt capital markets without government support in late 2007 and early 2008, placing approximately A$650m of mortgage-backed bonds.[9] The environment deteriorated again sharply in 2008 as the equity markets caught up with the scale of the turmoil in the structured credit markets, and started a major sell-off. Confidence in financial institutions of all types deteriorated throughout the year, and many banks struggled to fund themselves in the interbank markets, where borrowing rates rose sharply. Pressure built for financial institutions on multiple fronts, culminating in the failure of Lehman Brothers in September 2008.[10]
Capital and asset management: 2009–14
[edit]In September 2011, Bluestone acquired Close Credit Management from Close Brothers, and re-branded the business Bluestone Credit Management ('BCM').[11] BCM provides portfolio management services to a range of UK clients including major car and consumer finance businesses and Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs. BCM's 140 staff operate from offices in downtown Sheffield. In December, Bluestone participated in the purchase of a €350m portfolio of car and equipment receivables from Bank of Scotland in Ireland. Bluestone partnered with Värde Partners, a global investment fund to acquire the book. An office was set up in Dublin in March, 2012, and day-to-day management of the portfolio transitioned to Bluestone in early June. This transition involved adapting Bluestone's core technical platform (Boss) for use in Ireland, and migrating the portfolio information from Bank of Scotland's various systems to Boss. A team of 40 were deployed to manage the book, split between the Sheffield and Dublin offices. Shortly afterwards, Bluestone opened a new office in the Zeullig building in downtown Manila to act as a shared services centre for other group offices. Bluestone's Manila operation has over 50 staff now providing support services for Bluestone's Australian offices.
Resumption of lending
[edit]In 2014, Lloyds Development Capital (LDC) acquired approximately 50% of the shares in Bluestone from a number of existing shareholders, joining Macquarie Bank as Bluestone's major institutional shareholders. At the same time, the holding structure of the Group was inverted with the creation of a new UK top-co, Bluestone Consolidated Holdings Limited, which in June 2015 had net assets of £35m. Residential lending resumed in Australia in 2013, funded by a warehouse line from Macquarie Bank, and Bluestone started lending into the auto and equipment space in Ireland in 2014. Bluestone securitised residential mortgages in 2013 in both Australia and New Zealand, taking advantage of the normalisation of the capital markets globally.
Sale of Australasian operations
[edit]On 26 February 2018, Bluestone announced the sale of its Australasian operations, including its Manila based call centre, to funds managed by Cerberus Capital Management. A portion of the sale proceeds were then used by Bluestone's parent company, Bluestone Consolidated Holdings, to fund the buy-back and cancellation of all shares held by LDC. The transaction resulted in the management team led by Alistair Jeffery acquiring a controlling stake in the company, with major institutional shareholder, Macquarie Bank, doubling its shareholding to 30%. On completion in March, 2018, Bluestone Group had a team in Europe of 170 staff and net assets of over £20m / A$35m.[12] Around the same time, Bluestone moved its head office to the heart of Cambridge's construction and technology boom at One Station Square, Cambridge.
Sale of Bluestone Mortgages and Bluestone Motor Finance
[edit]In March, 2023, Bluestone announced the sale of its UK residential homeloan business, Bluestone Mortgages, to Shawbrook Bank. Under the terms of the transaction, Bluestone's holding company will sell 100% of the shares of BML and its subsidiaries to Shawbrook in a cash and share transaction. The transaction was subject to UK regulatory approval. In the 7 years since BML's launch, the business originated over £1.8b of residential mortgages, and at the time of sale managed a book of over £1.3b. The business continues to trade under the Bluestone brand, and utilises systems sourced by Fignum.
Then in September, Bluestone announced the sale of 100% of its Irish car lending business, Bluestone Motor Finance to the UK's Close Brothers Limited in an all-cash transaction. The business transitioned to the Close Brothers Motor Finance brand, and as with the mortgage business, continues to utilise origination and servicing systems delivered by Fignum.
- Bluestone operational history
UK | |
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Receivables management | |
Debt collections | |
Portfolio purchase | |
Financial technology |
References
[edit]- ^ Lynch, Damian (8 October 2002), "Bluestone eyes listing in the medium term", Australian Financial Review
- ^ Mortgage companies blitz Fast 100 (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 19 July 2008, retrieved 15 August 2009
- ^ Bluestone Group (22 November 2005), Bluestone announces major investment led by ABN AMRO (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 13 October 2009
- ^ Caliburn Partnership Pty Limited (2009), p32, Caliburn Annual Review 2009 (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 13 October 2009
- ^ Fitch Ratings (17 March 2009), Fitch Upgrades Bluestone Aust/NZ Primary Servicer Ratings; Affirms Special Servicer Ratings
- ^ "Sapphire XXVI Series 2022-1 Trust -- Moody's assigns definitive ratings to Bluestone Group's first non-conforming RMBS transaction for 2022". Retrieved 2 August 2023.
- ^ "Citigroup, RAMS eye A$ mortgage-backed debt: sources". Reuters. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
- ^ Frith, Brian (17 August 2007), "RAMS now one of the great IPO flops", The Australian, archived from the original on 8 September 2007, retrieved 18 August 2009
- ^ Jimenez, Katherine (15 March 2008), "Crunch curbs Bluestone lending", The Australian, archived from the original on 19 March 2008, retrieved 3 August 2009
- ^ Jeffery, Alistair (21 September 2008), After the Great Debt Markets Crash of 2007 - 11 (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 10 September 2011
- ^ "CCM takeover will lead to UK expansion - Bluestone". Insider Media. 23 September 2011. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
- ^ Moullakis, Joyce (26 February 2018), "Cerberus Capital swallows Bluestone (Australasia) in latest lending deal", Australian Financial Review