Business

Quebec promises to pass on Norbourg assets

Quebec has promised to pass Norboug assets to investors.

The province of Quebec has promised to pass on to investors all the assets that it collects from Norbourg, a mutual fund company that went bankrupt owing millions.

Lawrence Bergman, Quebec's revenue minister, said Wednesday that Quebec has already collected $6 million from Vincent Lacroix, the former president of the mutual-fund group, and it expects to collect an additional $18 million.

That sum will be passed on to Norbourg's 9,000 investors, Bergman told Canadian Press.

"I am very sensitive to the plight of these investors and I feel for them," Bergman said.

Bergman said the province waited to make its announcement until Lacroix had confirmed he would not appeal a Quebec Superior Court ruling that declared him bankrupt and ordered his assets seized.

In his May 19 decision, Justice Robert Mongeon said Lacroix stole from investors, used the mutual-fund group to launder money, and defrauded the provincial Revenue Department and others with false declarations and financial statements.

Mongeon concluded that a best-case scenario would see Lacroix's assets total $37 million, compared with the $60 million being sought by creditors.

According to the judge, the amounts owed creditors include $18 millionto the Quebec Revenue Department, $12 millionto Revenue Canada and at least $24 millionto RSM Richter, the accounting firm that is managing Norbourg's remaining assets.

RSM Richter is actually seeking $37 million, Canadian Press said.

Norbourg's problems came to light last summer when Quebec's financial regulator discovered a $130-million discrepancy between the company's financial results and its assets under management.