Oh bummer. It has been thought that the Dutch investors were VERY worried about exposure after the Polina Star III accident. While Oyster said the design issue that cause the catastrophic hull failure was contained to just a few boats, existing and potential owners were not buying it.
It might come back as a new entity as a way to shed the existing product liability. Not the first time that game has been played.
Saw this on Facebook. Sounds more like a financial backer pulled the plug rather than Oyster ducking liabilities? Or maybe the financial backer had those thoughts? They just launched a 745 at the Dusseldorf Show.
Posted in " Sailing Anarchy" : ".... One of the more interesting parts of the Dusseldorf Boat Show was sitting down with Oyster Yachts CEO David Tydeman for a chat and a tour of their new 745, pictured here. David is a man with decades of experience in this sport and during our conversation shared that they had something like $70 million in orders on the books. To get a 745, not only would it set you back about $5 million, but you would looking well into 2019 before you could even think about getting one. How’s this for a cockpit?
The picture he painted was that the company was very satisfied to be where they were, and had eyes forward on projects like the 118′ Reichel/Pugh beauty of which he thought perhaps two orders were about to close. So it came as a shock when the news came out about their huge financial issues.
I spoke with David on the phone and he of course was stunned and reticent to say much other than the withdrawal of their financial backer, HTP Investments did them in. We don’t know the full story, but without question, the 400 employees who are loosing their jobs, and the people with boats on order and under build are the ones who are going to feel this immediately.