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Suppliers have filed for Enter in court because of the debt of 462.5 million rubles

Online-retailer Enter owed suppliers about 462.5 million rubles, according to Kommersant. During the last 3 months, 39 counterparties sued the company. The situation is complicated by the fact that the founder of Enter, Maxim Nogotkov and his new controlling shareholder, Oleg Malis, has not fully resolved the recent conflict.

The most serious complaints against the company were made by TD Absolute LLC, which supplies products of such brands as Sony, Siemens, LG, Samsung. Enter owed him 292.6 million rubles.

Mikhail Burmistrov, CEO of Infoline-Analytics, said that, according to the results of 2014, Enter is one of the three leaders in terms of the net loss among online retailers. In 2013, the company's net loss was 3.9 billion rubles.
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“The business model was built with a view to large-scale investments by the beneficiaries and the sale to a financial or strategic investor, and not to survive in a crisis without attracting external financing,” said Burmistrov. Enter could break even by 2017. And this is according to optimistic forecasts.

In November 2014, Maxim Nogotkov was forced to repay his Svyaznoy network and retail company Enter for debts. At that time, only the Pandora jewelry network remained in his ownership, and this together with Sberbank. So Enter moved into the number of assets of the Cyprus company Trellas, as, indeed, Svyaznoy and Svyaznoy Bank. Later, the company Solvers Oleg Malis redeemed the debts of Svyaznoy and was to receive his shares.

But the shares of Nogotkov never passed. Moreover, he withdrew the irrevocable power of attorney to transfer shares, which was issued to Solvers in December 2014. Malis considered that the purpose of these actions was to resell the shares of Svyaznoy to MTS, which expressed its interest in purchasing a 49% stake for 9 billion rubles.

Such behavior Nogotkova could lead to the fact that the transaction with Solvers would be invalidated. However, in February, the Federal Antimonopoly Service and the Supreme Court of Cyprus sided with Malis.

Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/288994/


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