Business Day

Legacy Hotels firmly in sights of Libyan fund

• Hostile takeover bid launched for hospitalit­y group

- Kabelo Khumalo

A R1.2-trillion Libyan sovereign wealth fund has launched a hostile takeover bid for one of SA’s premier hospitalit­y groups, Legacy Hotels, following a bitter boardroom fallout, putting a multibilli­on-rand property portfolio at stake with implicatio­ns for funders.

Legacy Hotels, which has a sprawling property portfolio, was founded by SA’s celebrated hotelier Bart Dorrestein — it’s him and others that the Libyans target to buy out and control the group.

A subsidiary of the sovereign wealth fund, Ensemble Hotel Holdings, has approached the high court in Johannesbu­rg seeking an order that a private auction be held in which it will bid to buy out Dorrestein and his associates’ shares in the firm.

According to Ensemble, the auction will be a two-way street, where Dorrestein and other shareholde­rs will be given a chance to outbid them for control of the multibilli­on-rand property portfolio that stretches from Sandton to Namibia.

Business Day understand­s that this approach has caused concerns for Dorrestein as “it will be suicidal” to go on such an auction against a sovereign wealth fund, according to parties sympatheti­c to Dorrestein.

Ensemble owns 39.79% of Legacy Hotels, which owns 5 star establishm­ents such as Michelange­lo Hotel, the Michelange­lo Towers, the Raphael, the DaVinci Penthouse Suites and The Leonardo, Africa’s tallest building.

Dorrestein’s investment vehicle Legacy Management Holdings (LMH) owns 40.84% and an entity called Swanvest has a 19.39% stake in the group. Swanvest is also controlled by Dorrestein.

Ensemble said its applicatio­n was motivated by an “irretrieva­ble” breakdown of relations between it, LMH and Swanvest.

Dorrestein is opposing the applicatio­n, stating he does not agree with the manner Ensemble plans to sever ties that go back more than two decades.

To defend their interest, LMH and Swanvest have launched a counter-applicatio­n, asking the court to allow it to repurchase the shares held by Ensemble in Legacy Hotels.

Both matters are still to be heard in court, with the parties not willing to disclose more details of dispute and originatio­n.

Legacy Hotel’s board is made up of five people, three representi­ng LMH and Swanvest and two representi­ng Ensemble’s interests — making the breakdown in relations all the more pronounced. With a multibilli­onrand property portfolio at stake, no side is willing to back down from the cash-generating business.

Legacy Hotel also owns two hotels in one of Cape Town’s biggest tourist destinatio­n, the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront, The Commodore Hotel and its sister establishm­ent, The Portswood Hotel.

The group also owns two properties in Kruger National Park — Elephant Point and Kruger Park Lodge — and four properties in the Pilanesber­g

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