Business Day

Political climate most uncertain since apartheid, says Investec CEO

- Tom Mackenzie and Adelaide Changole

SA’s political climate is the most uncertain since the end of the apartheid era, with investors acutely concerned about a potential coalition between the governing party and the EFF after next year’s elections, Investec Bank CEO Richard Wainwright says.,

Anxiety was intensifyi­ng over the implicatio­ns of the governing ANC falling short of the 50% it needed to retain control of the continent’s most industrial­ised economy, Wainwright said in an interview with Bloomberg TV on Wednesday.

That could push the party to tie up with the EFF, which advocates for the nationalis­ation of banks, mines and land.

“There’s probably the highest level of uncertaint­y politicall­y that we’ve had since 1994,” he said. “It does appear that they are siding in certain instances with the EFF. That will be very negative for internatio­nal investors and domestic investors.”

The ANC has governed SA since the end of white-minority rule almost three decades ago. Opinion polls show it risks losing its majority next year because of a voter backlash over the party’s failure to tackle record power outages, along with rampant poverty, unemployme­nt and inequality.

The ANC has linked up with the EFF and other smaller parties to take control of a number of city councils after local government elections in November 2021.

DETERRENT

The political uncertaint­y was serving as a deterrent to foreign investors, Wainwright said. He spoke a day before President Cyril Ramaphosa hosts an annual investment conference after setting a target in 2018 to attract R1.2-trillion of investment.

“We expected the current president, when he came into the presidency, to accelerate reforms, but unfortunat­ely, we’ve not seen that,” the Investec CEO said.

“I think the level of uncertaint­y on the politics will again make it very difficult to now attract a significan­t investment both internatio­nal and domestic,” he said.

So far, SA has “realised” R1.1-trillion of investment since Ramaphosa set the target, the president’s spokespers­on, Vincent Magwenya, said on Wednesday.

Investors would be looking to the president for details on government plans to deliver on structural reforms, including restructur­ing power utility Eskom, expanding electricit­ygrid capacity and improving the ease of doing business in SA, Wainwright said.

“Unfortunat­ely, we’ve got a general election next year, so significan­t policy changes are going to be difficult, so our baseline expectatio­n is that we are not going to see massive policy shifts, which we need — we need the structural reform to attract the internatio­nal investment,” he said.

“I don’t think anything is going to happen until after the elections next year.”

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