Business Day

Another CEO leaves Texton

• Fund managers question ability of executives to run a listed fund

- Alistair Anderson Property Writer andersona@businessli­ve.co.za

Texton Property Fund has lost its fourth CEO in as many years, and fund managers are questionin­g whether the Texton board and management are fit to run a listed real estate fund. Nosiphiwo Balfour resigned on Friday without citing a reason. Texton’s board has said the company is in a closed period until it releases financial results for the year to June.

Texton Property Fund has lost its fourth CEO in as many years and fund managers are questionin­g whether the Texton board and management are fit to run a listed real estate fund.

Nosiphiwo Balfour resigned on Friday without citing a reason. Texton’s board has said the company is in a closed period until it releases financial results for the year to June. An interim CEO is being appointed.

Balfour replaced Nic Morris, who abruptly resigned in 2017.

Morris had replaced Angelique de Rauville, who replaced Rob Kane.

Garreth Elston, a portfolio manager at Reitway Global, said Texton needed to show investors a clear leadership strategy. The group — which has a market capitalisa­tion of R2bn and owns mostly office assets in SA and retail assets in the UK — also needs to clarify its investment strategy, he said. Its property portfolio is worth about R5.5bn.

“There are many SA-listed companies that have had a very trying few years, but Texton stands out for the sheer volatility in its leadership,” Elston said.

“The choice of CEO after Nic Morris’ departure at the time was a bit confusing, as the company really required a very experience­d property profession­al, and ideally a turn-around specialist considerin­g the deepseated issues that the company has faced over the past three plus years.

“I believe the company lost a great deal of investor support over the past few years as a result of its constant departures, especially as concerns CEO and CFO; inconsiste­nt messaging and investor communicat­ions; and lack of a clearly articulate­d strategy for the company going forward,” he said.

Texton looked like a company “staring into the abyss at the moment, and the board has to take some very hard decisions to choose the right leader who’ll not only right the ship, but at a minimum hold the position long enough to make some progress”, Elston said.

The company’s financial results were postponed to September 28. The postponeme­nt was prompted by Texton’s black economic empowermen­t (BEE) consortium defaulting on its loan from the Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF) to acquire a more than 13% stake in Texton. The GEPF has R2-trillion worth of financial investment­s which are managed by the Public Investment Corporatio­n. It had advanced a R443.5m loan to the BEE consortium in 2014.

As part of the security Texton granted the GEPF a put option, which meant it could sell shares at a specified price and time. In a recent stock exchange filing, Texton said because its BEE consortium told the PIC that it is “unable to remedy the default” by September 12, the GEPF decided to exercise the put option. Texton would then be required to repurchase the Texton shares from the GEPF.

Texton’s share price closed 7.37% lower at R5.53 on Friday. The shares are down more than 40% since 2014.

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