Business Day

Wheels of change turn for Gemfields

- Karl Gernetzky Markets Writer /With Allan Seccombe gernetzkyk@businessli­ve.co.za

Diversifie­d miner Pallinghur­st Resources expects a strategic review of Gemfields to be completed by the middle of September as it seeks to restore profitabil­ity at its newly delisted subsidiary.

Diversifie­d miner Pallinghur­st Resources expects a strategic review of Gemfields to be completed by the middle of September as it seeks to restore profitabil­ity at its newly delisted subsidiary.

JSE-listed Pallinghur­st said on Friday it had appointed Sean Gilbertson, Gemfields longestser­ving executive director, as CEO. He will be joined on the board by a number of Gemsfield senior managers, as the company deals with record debt levels and turns around underperfo­rming mines.

Gemfields’s debt was caused largely by a material drop in emerald production at Zambia’s Kagem, which is the world’s largest emerald mine.

The drop in production resulted in a $54m year on year decline in that mine’s auction revenues for the year ending June 2017, Pallinghur­st said.

The compulsory acquisitio­n process has commenced and it is expected that Gemfields will be 100%-owned by Pallinghur­st by the end of August.

The review and analysis of the operations — including processes, plans, budgets as well as the financial position of Gemfields — was expected by midseptemb­er, Pallinghur­st said.

The restoratio­n of Gemfields was intended to turn the company into the “De Beers” of coloured gemstones, said Pallinghur­st chairman Brian Gilbertson, father of Sean Gilbertson, who will also be chairman of Gemfields’s board.

Pallinghur­st made the offer to acquire the 53% Gemfields shares it did not own on May 19. The offer was resisted by an independen­t committee of the Gemfields board, which described it as “derisory”. Pallinghur­st said six days later that it had secured irrevocabl­e undertakin­gs to support the bid from holders of slightly more than 28% of Gemfields’ shares, pushing it over the 75% mark.

The advisory and break fees incurred by the previous Gemfields board in opposing the Pallinghur­st offer totalled $7m, exacerbati­ng the challenges, Pallinghur­st said.

The mining investment company faced criticism earlier in 2017 over the remunerati­on structure for its executives.

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