I don't know. But shouldn't the rows go close to adding up to the same total. According to my transcribing into Excel they are:
Resolution 1 493,747,927
Resolution 2 493,920,563
Resolution 3 493,425,650
Resolution 4 495,567,028
Resolution 5 531,546,372
Resolution 6 531,970,337
Resolution 7 493,388,031
Difference between the highest and lowest is 38,582,306. Does this simply mean that about 38 million worth of votes couldn't be bothered to tick the boxes for resolutions 1 to 4 and 7. Shouldn't an empty box equate to an 'abstain'? Anyone?
If we assume WC doesn't get the chair then the Open Proxies go to PIFAG, whereby the lowest 'for' vote was 41.1% for Resolution 6. But this only represented 47.5% of the 1,119,710,357 units on issue.
Castlereagh was reported by the Courier Mail as saying "Mr Armstrong said the motion to remove Wellington had the support of 82 per cent of the 325 million units voted so far, or about 40 per cent of the total. The other six resolutions had the backing of more than 90 per cent."
Hence based on this available data, assuming no votes were sent to both registries, then the lowest 'for' vote was 56.68% for resolution 5. I.e. 10,324,406 + 208,359,693 + 82% of 325M = 485,463,220 'for' votes out of 856,546,372 votes cast). Even if WC did get the Chair and presumably then the 10M Open Proxies, the lowest 'for' vote % would be 54.27%.
You are correct. The sum of all proxy votes should all add to the same figure. You can't have any discrepancy because only whole proxy forms are acceptable and the total figure will be the total number of proxy forms received. As I understand the practice, unticked boxes are an "abstain" unless the person counting the proxies ticks one of the the unticked boxes "for" or "against". That's why an unbiased and unrelated independent company should tally the votes.
Compared with the figures I have seen from Computershare the figures for the "abstain" vote are about one sixth of those received by Computershare. Also the figures for the "For" vote are lower than those from Computershare.
The magnitude of the figures suggest Armstrong Registry Services have combined the figures from Computershare with their own. Otherwise the total numbers of proxies lodged would be about 900,000,000. This exceeds the total number of units on issue being 830,000,000. Armstrong have been supplied with Computershare figures on an almost daily basis while Armstrong have refused to do the same.
Based on the proportions of votes received being about 90% "for" and 5% "against" as Mr Phil Armstrong of Castlereagh Capital has said, the total number of investors who would vote against the motions would be about 5% of 755,000,000 ie 37,750,000. This assumes all of the proxies voting against the motions had been received by Armstrong Registry Services and 100% of our investors had voted.
The total issued units is about 755,000,000 being original issue and 75,000,000 being the Placement ie 830,000,000.
If we assume the total placement voted "against" and add that number to the maximum proportion calculated above we get 75,000,000 + 37,750,000 = 112,000,000.
To see figures approaching 300,000,000 "against" is unbelievable. When coupled with other discrepancies, especially the totals not being the same, the table in the NSX release appears to be a fabrication. One could therefore seriously doubt the ability and integrity of Armstrong Registry Services.
Steve