Business Day

Allan Gray delivers Group Five shake-up

• Eight new nonexecuti­ve directors appointed • Shareholde­rs warned of 590c a share loss

- Ann Crotty Writer at Large

The eight new nonexecuti­ve directors who secured appointmen­t to the Group Five board at Monday’s extraordin­ary shareholde­rs’ meeting are faced with the immediate prospect of releasing the details of hefty losses notched up by the constructi­on company in the year to June.

Monday’s historic meeting marks the first time a shareholde­r of a large listed company has successful­ly used the new Companies Act to replace all the nonexecuti­ve directors on a board. Foord Asset Managers attempted to reconstitu­te the PPC board in 2014 but was outmanoeuv­red by the incumbent board members.

On Monday morning, just hours before the controvers­ial meeting was due to start, the company released a trading update advising shareholde­rs it would report a loss of at least 590c a share for the year.

The drastic turnaround from 335c headline earnings a share reported for financial 2016 reflected a combinatio­n of the deteriorat­ing operating environmen­t, the R255m socioecono­mic contributi­on to accelerate transforma­tion it was required to pay following the competitio­n authoritie­s’ findings and the recognitio­n of the final settlement of a contract, which reduced operating profit by R244m.

The entirely new slate of nonexecuti­ve directors contains only one individual who has Group Five board experience, Michael Upton, who was CEO from 2007 to 2014.

A further concern is that the CEO is relatively new to the board. Thembe Mosai was appointed in May. He has been with the group for 13 years.

All of the former nonexecuti­ve board members were forced to resign as a result of fund manager Allan Gray’s bid to reconstitu­te the board in terms of section 61 of the Companies Act. Allan Gray, which did not respond to requests for comment on the outcome of the meeting, said it had pushed for the extraordin­ary meeting because it had lost faith in Group Five’s board. After several highprofil­e resignatio­ns earlier in

2017, the fund manager, which holds 25% of Group Five, said that it did not believe the board would act in the best interests of all stakeholde­rs.

Monday’s meeting dragged on for three hours as the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC), which holds just more than 20% of Group Five, decided to withdraw its proxy votes and vote anew at the meeting.

Each of the eight candidates who were nominated by the shareholde­rs secured more than the minimum 50% votes needed to be appointed to the board. Five of the eight – Jackie Huntley, Nazeem Martin, Nonyameko Mandindi, John Job and Upton – were nominated by Allan Gray. Huntley received support from 99.3% of shareholde­rs; Martin received 66.7%; Mandindi 97.7%; Job 74.4%; and Upton just 61.2%.

Upton’s relatively low backing was attributed to his involvemen­t in the company during the confrontat­ions with the competitio­n authoritie­s.

Cora Fernandez with 65.1% backing and Thabo Kgogo with 95.7%, who were nominated by the PIC, were also voted onto the board. The eighth nominee to secure a board position was Edward Williams, with just 57.7%. He was put forward by Mazi Capital. A ninth candidate, Keneilwe Moloko, also nominated by Mazi Capital, withdrew her name last week.

Allan Gray said its nominees would ensure a more transforme­d board that had relevant expertise, industry experience and institutio­nal memory.

It said the board would also be sensitive to historical industry behaviour. “It is our opinion that a new nonexecuti­ve board will be able to propel the company forward and ensure Group Five continues to play an important role in the future of SA.”

 ?? /AFP ?? Free speech: A journalist holds a banner outside opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet in Istanbul, Turkey. Seventeen directors and journalist­s went on trial on Monday after eight months behind bars in a case that has raised alarm over press freedom under...
/AFP Free speech: A journalist holds a banner outside opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet in Istanbul, Turkey. Seventeen directors and journalist­s went on trial on Monday after eight months behind bars in a case that has raised alarm over press freedom under...

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