Business Day

Stellar gets time to unlock value

• Investment company’s shareholde­rs approve contentiou­s increase in the dividend rate on preference shares

- Marc Hasenfuss Editor at Large hasenfussm@fm.co.za

Stellar Capital Partners, the small investment firm that has retail tycoon Christo Wiese as a major shareholde­r, has been given breathing room in its efforts to unlock value.

Stellar Capital Partners (SCP), the small investment firm that has retail tycoon Christo Wiese as a major shareholde­r, has been given breathing room in its efforts to unlock value.

Shareholde­rs in SCP on Tuesday engaged executives in a robust debate before approving a contentiou­s increase in the dividend rate on the company’s preference shares.

Shareholde­rs that participat­ed in the Cape Town meeting included investment entities that have built meaningful stakes in SCP in recent months, notably Hollard-aligned investment company Westbrooke, Rational Expectatio­ns (linked to Capitec Bank founder Michiel le Roux) and Genesis Capital Partners.

The R600m worth of preference shares will now carry a dividend rate of 120% of the prime rate.

A drastic fall in SCP’s net asset value over the past 18 months triggered the change to the preference share structure.

According to Stellar’s interim report to the end of December, two financial covenants set out in the convertibl­e preference share circular — namely the asset cover ratio and net asset value minimum threshold — had been breached.

But Stellar had obtained waivers of compliance with all preference share financial covenants from holders of 92% of the preference shares, including banking giant RMB. The revised preference share arrangemen­t means Stellar has bought time to unlock the value of its heavily discounted investment portfolio, which includes majority stakes in asset manager Prescient and security technology group Amecor as well as an influentia­l stake in JSE-listed Torre Industrial.

Shareholde­rs were still keen to gauge whether a restructur­ing of the preference share agreement was the most prudent option for Stellar, noting that certain executives were ordinary shareholde­rs as well as preference shareholde­rs.

Stellar CEO Peter van Zyl stressed the preference share restructur­ing did not signal a long extension of the arrangemen­t. “It’s not a long-term instrument … we intend to settle the preference share liability over the next 12 months. We can do this in a piecemeal (repayment) process as well.”

Van Zyl reminded shareholde­rs that SCP has already indicated that two of its investment­s were up for sale and another investment might be disposed of through an empowermen­t deal.

He said incurring interestbe­aring debt would prove more costly than the revised preference share structure.

SCP nonexecuti­ve director Corrie Roodt said that the revised preference share structure was in the best interest of shareholde­rs, precluding any preference shareholde­r — and specifical­ly a bank — from pushing the company into a firesale of its investment­s.

SCP carries a sum-of-theparts value of about 105c per share, but trades at about 60c on the JSE. The large discount has prompted calls for SCP to unlock value.

However, Jared Winer, an executive at Westbrooke, was concerned that the revised preference share arrangemen­t could delay efforts to unlock value at SCP.

He said that preference shareholde­rs — that earned dividends on their preference shares — could afford to wait for an eventual unlocking of value.

Large SCP shareholde­r James Bishop suggested that the company had no choice in the matter.

“It’s the only way to redeem the preference shares in an orderly fashion.”

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