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KINNARA and the Marina Bay City Buyout: Millions Banked, Assets Withheld, and a Buyout Now Denied

KINNARA and the Marina Bay City Buyout: Millions Banked, Assets Withheld, and a Buyout Now Denied
KINNARA (K-I-N-N-A-R-A), an Asian real estate platform, was bought out of the Marina Bay City Lombok project months ago by Lux Properties. That fact has never been disputed and was publicly acknowledged at the time through media releases and statements made by both parties.
As part of that buyout, Lux Properties assumed full management control and ownership of the Marina Bay City project, while KINNARA exited the project in exchange for a multi-million-dollar payment.
However, leaked evidence now raises serious questions about what has happened since.
Millions Banked After the Buyout
According to internal financial evidence seen by insiders, KINNARA has already banked between AUD $3.7 million and $4 million from the buyout payments since the transaction occurred. It is believed the true figure may exceed $4 million, with further payments conditional on performance milestones that KINNARA itself is responsible for achieving.
Critically, approximately AUD $1.2 million of these funds is alleged to have been concealed from Lux.
Why does that matter?
Because under the contractual arrangements, Lux is entitled to 50% of certain incoming funds, as Lux is the party contracted to build the villas and deliver the project. By allegedly withholding disclosure of those funds, KINNARA would avoid paying Lux its contractual share.
If proven, this would raise serious questions around financial disclosure, contractual compliance, and fiduciary conduct.
Client Funds and Bank Accounts
These revelations come on top of millions of dollars previously received by KINNARA into its bank accounts, funds understood to belong to clients of Lux and the Marina Bay City project, which Lux now fully manages.
Lux has since invested millions more of its own capital into Marina Bay City, including construction, villa builds, infrastructure, permits, and project delivery — all after the buyout was completed.
CEO Resignation and Public Confirmation
As part of the buyout agreement, KINNARA CEO Adrian Campbell resigned. At the time, media releases were issued confirming that Lux had assumed full control and ownership of Marina Bay City.
Those statements were not disputed.
Yet despite this:
•Share transfers that were meant to be signed have still not been completed
•Digital assets promised as part of the buyout have never been handed over
•And now, months later, KINNARA is attempting to deny that a buyout ever occurred
Rewriting History?
Observers find this behaviour difficult to reconcile with the public record.
If there was no buyout:
•Why is KINNARA sitting on AUD $3.7–$4+ million in buyout funds?
•Why have those funds not been returned?
•Why were media releases confirming Lux’s ownership approved and published?
•Why did the CEO resign as part of the transaction?
And if KINNARA truly believes it still has rights to the project:
•Why not negotiate to buy back its shares?
•Especially now, when those shares would be worth significantly more due to Lux’s post-buyout investment in construction and development
A Simple Question That Remains Unanswered
At the heart of this controversy is one unavoidable question:
If there was no buyout, why has KINNARA kept the money?
Until that question is answered — and until the funds, share transfers, and digital assets are either properly accounted for or returned — the contradictions will only deepen, and scrutiny around KINNARA’s conduct will continue to intensify.