Business Day

Marc Wainer, from fish shop to land mogul

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

Marc Wainer, who founded what became SA's secondbigg­est listed property fund and oversaw deals from Australia to Eastern Europe without ever having a formal education, has died. Wainer, 71, succumbed to a heart attack on Monday, Redefine Properties, the company he retired from just eight months ago, shortly after the death of his wife, Lesley, confirmed. He started Redefine, of which he was CEO and later chair, in 1999.

Marc Wainer, who founded what became SA's secondbigg­est listed property fund and oversaw deals from Australia to Eastern Europe without ever having a formal education, has died.

Wainer, 71, succumbed to a heart attack on Monday, Redefine Properties, the company he retired from just eight months ago, shortly after the death of his wife, Lesley, confirmed.

He started Redefine, of which he was CEO and later chair, in 1999 and listed it on the JSE in 2000 with a market capitalisa­tion of R463m. Its market value has since grown to about R15bn.

Wainer started out in business running his parents’ grocery and fish shop in Yeoville, Johannesbu­rg, and was known for his knack for business deals.

He entered the property business in 1973 when he stumbled on a job advert for a shopping centre manager in Kempton Park, partly landing the post because he was the only candidate who had visited the mall before his interview to get an insight into required improvemen­ts.

He went on to join Investec in 1986 as MD for property and started a consultanc­y firm, Marc Wainer & Associates, in 1992.

Wainer was “a visionary and an astute deal maker”, Redefine said in a statement on Monday.

The company owns more than 300 local properties with the last reported total assets exceeding R100bn. It also has investment­s in Germany, the UK, Poland and Australia.

Wainer was succeeded as CEO by Andrew Konig in 2014.

In his later life, he became well known for running mentorship programmes, including The Mentorship Challenge television show, and as a business commentato­r.

Konig said Wainer’s death is a huge loss for corporate SA.

“He leaves a void in the lives of people in the entire property sector who did not escape his characteri­stic wit, infectious laughter and his genuine love and concern for those he worked with.”

Wainer was “truly a stalwart of SA’s property landscape“, said SA Property Owners Associatio­n CEO Neil Gopal. Some of his career highlights include the developmen­t of Canal Walk in Cape Town and deals that produced the well-known funds ApexHi and Fountainhe­ad, Gopal said.

Norbert Sasse, group CEO of rival real estate company Growthpoin­t Properties, said the news of Wainer’s death has shaken the commercial property industry. “Marc Wainer was a huge part of this country. There was a healthy level of competitio­n between Marc and I and we had a lot of respect for each other. “After his retirement, we became closer in our common interest, a love for property. He made a lot of time for others and lived life to the full. He was an unforgetta­ble person.”

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Marc Wainer

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