Business Day

Ayo Technology deeper in the red after losses

- Mudiwa Gavaza gavazam@businessli­ve.co.za

Ayo Technology Solutions continued to lose money in the full year to end-August 2023 due to a host of issues, including decreased gross margins, tax adjustment­s and loan impairment­s.

The technology group’s revenue saw an increase of 28%, rising from R1.8bn to R2.3bn due to improved performanc­e from the managed services and unified communicat­ions divisions.

The stock was down 9.89% by 3pm on Wednesday at 82c. The thinly traded share has lost 72.1% of its value so far in 2023.

The managed services division, Sizwe IT Group, contribute­d R1.2bn, up from R933m the prior year, thanks to an increase in awarded tenders. The unit has been under the spotlight in recent months. In September, Ayo flagged allegation­s of financial irregulari­ties at Sizwe, saying an internal audit revealed acts of irregulari­ties in its books.

Business Day reported in June that Sizwe and the Eastern Cape education department were in negotiatio­ns to reach an out-of-court settlement over a deal to supply matric pupils with computer tablets. The department and Sizwe in 2019 entered into a deal worth more than R500m to supply 55,000 tablets to matrics. It was a three-year lease agreement with a price tag of R538m, amounting to nearly R240 per student per month.

The deal was interdicte­d by the State Informatio­n Technology Agency (Sita), which is charged with procuring IT services for the government. Sita argued it was not involved in the procuremen­t process.

In other parts of the business, the unified communicat­ion division, comprising Kathea and Kathea Kalula,’ s also revenue saw rose growth. from R236m to R324m, while Kalula’s grew from R134m to R223m.

The group’s gross profit percentage decreased from 22% to 16% due to lower margins in the managed services divisions and more procuremen­t of equipment distributi­on contracts.

To mitigate this, the group announced a restructur­ing of the corporate head office to reduce costs and implemente­d costsaving initiative­s. Despite these measures, operating costs remained high due to the cost of restructur­ing and retrenchme­nt, legal fees, and impairment of non-performing investment­s.

The group incurred other operating losses of R56m due to derecognit­ion of derivative­s, compared with gains of R59m in the prior year. Despite this, the stock portfolio earned dividend income of R7m and had fair value gains of R10m, up to R20m.

The group generated interest income and investment income totalling R150m, mainly due to interest rate increases.

Overall, Ayo reported a wider loss before taxation of R653m, from a R233m loss in the previous year, mainly due to decreased gross margins, lower fair value adjustment­s on investment­s, VAT adjustment, derecognit­ion of derivative­s and the impairment of loans.

The group said it continues to face challenges such as a subdued economic environmen­t after Covid-19, negative publicity, banking challenges and lack of access to funding.

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