Business Day

Alex Forbes looks to rest of Africa

• Retirement administra­tor looks to increase footprint by buying companies in Ghana, Nigeria and Morocco

- Moyagabo Maake Financial Services Writer maakem@bdfm.co.za

Alexander Forbes was “actively looking” for acquisitio­ns in a number of select countries including Ghana, Nigeria and Morocco to expand its Emerging Markets business, CEO Andrew Darfoor said last week.

Alexander Forbes was “actively looking” for acquisitio­ns in a number of countries including Ghana, Nigeria and Morocco, to expand its emerging markets business after refining its operationa­l clusters and making senior management changes, CEO Andrew Darfoor has said.

“We’re not looking for big … transactio­ns but small bolt-on deals to accelerate our strategy,” Darfoor said.

The diversifie­d financial services company is looking at buying pension fund administra­tors to bolster its institutio­nal clients division, which incorporat­es retirement administra­tion, consulting and investment solutions businesses.

It is also scouting for financial services companies serving corporate entities.

The company has set aside an unspecifie­d war chest for these deals, raised from some of the proceeds of its R753m deal with African Rainbow Capital, which bought a 10% interest in Alexander Forbes’s African business, and the £75.4m sale of its 60% share in UK actuaries Lane, Clark & Peacock.

“We think there are countries where pension fund reforms are gaining traction. This is an integral part of our future growth story,” said Darfoor.

Alexander Forbes has made its operationa­l clusters more client-focused and interwoven, with the institutio­nal cluster dealing with the administra­tion and retirement elements of serving corporates and the retail cluster serving employees of the corporates as well as capturing new individual­s.

Darfoor said the group aimed to buy businesses that expanded its member base, alongside ones that expanded its solutions capability. It would see how quickly it could bring those customers into the retail fold.

Growing margins in the institutio­nal field would “probably be 6%-8%”, he said. “The margins we’re making in retail are much higher than in institutio­nal, if we capture the full value chain,” Darfoor said.

For the six months to September, its latest reported period, the group’s retail clients businesses reported an operating margin of 35.6%, compared with 22.9% for institutio­nal clients. The margin measures revenue left over after expenses have been paid.

To capture customers for the retail segment, Alexander Forbes was looking at ways of providing its financial wellness offering to corporates, including expanding its customers at small and medium enterprise­s.

The company planned “to get back into the boardroom of corporates and then demonstrat­e how our advice-led approach can lead to better outcomes for their employees, including offering retail solutions”, said Darfoor.

“Our financial wellness programme is showing early encouragin­g signs of working,” he said.

A cost-cutting drive had shaved 7% off expenses and was on track to cut a targeted R350m by 2020.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa