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South Africa’s Naspers plans new listing of pay-TV unit to focus on Internet

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JOHANNESBU­RG: Naspers Ltd is planning to list its pay-TV unit in Johannesbu­rg, spinning off a business it developed over three decades as Africa’s most valuable company focuses on its fast-growing Internet investment­s.

The split will take place in the first half of next year, chief executive officer Bob Van Dijk said on a call with reporters after the announceme­nt on Monday. Naspers shares trade at a steep discount to its most important asset – Chinese Internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd – and Van Dijk said two months ago he may separate parts of the company to boost shareholde­r value.

“We expect that the new company will be partofthet­op40compan­iesonJohan­nesburg’s stock exchange,” the CEO said.

“We are also looking at some primary listings for some of our other businesses to further unlock value.”

Naspers has grown from an Africa-focused media and TV company into an investor in internet businesses around the world, from online travel agents in India to food delivery in Brazil and education software in the US. Its biggest success by some distance was an early investment in Tencent.

Renaissanc­e Capital analyst David Ferguson valued the Multichoic­e business, which will include assets such as streaming service Showmax, at around US$6.6bil.

“In terms of unlocking the value for Naspers, this is a good first step. And it shows that management is serious about closing the value gap between Naspers and Tencent’s share price,” Ferguson said by phone from Moscow.

Naspers shares erased an earlier decline on the news to close up 0.7% at 3,206 rand in Johannesbu­rg on Monday. The company is valued at 1.4 trillion rand (US$93.7bil).

Multichoic­e is “profitable and highly cash generative,” the Cape Town-based company said in a statement. It generated revenue of 47.1 billion rand and trading profit of 6.1 bil- lion rand in the year through March and has grown to have 13.5 million subscriber­s across about 50 countries.

Naspers’ 31% stake in Tencent is now worth more than Naspers itself and shareholde­rs have put pressure on Van Dijk to reduce the valuation gap.

Part of the problem, Van Dijk said in July, was that Naspers makes up too large a portion of Johannesbu­rg’s stock exchange, meaning some money managers are forced to limit their exposure. The unbundling of Multichoic­e to Naspers shareholde­rs will see Naspers itself fully exit the company, the CEO said on Monday. — Bloomberg

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