Cape Times

Bondholder­s worried about Eskom’s delayed interims

- Siseko Njobeni

AS QUESTIONS surroundin­g Eskom’s delay in releasing its interim results swirl, investment manager Futuregrow­th Asset Management said yesterday that Eskom’s failure to release the results within stipulated time lines raised concerns among bondholder­s.

The JSE this week threatened to delist Eskom bonds if the utility did not release the interim report by the end of this month.

Eskom subsequent­ly committed to release the report by then.

Local asset managers who hold Eskom bonds are likely to be watching the developmen­ts closely with concern.

“Investors should rightly be concerned when any bond market issuer is unable to produce financial statements within the prescribed period, and it is entirely correct for the JSE to ensure standards are maintained.

“Otherwise what is the point of listing requiremen­ts and investor protection­s?” said Futuregrow­th Asset Management chief investment officer Andrew Canter yesterday.

Canter said Futuregrow­th had maintained its investment freeze on Eskom as it is yet to conclude a governance review of Eskom.

In 2016, Futuregrow­th announced that it would no longer fund state-owned companies Eskom, Transnet, South African National Roads Agency (Sanral), Landbank, Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) and the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n (IDC).

Canter said the company imposed the ban until it could conclude satisfacto­ry governance reviews.

“During (the fourth quarter of) 2016 we assessed and reported that we would re-commence lending to Land Bank, IDC and DBSA. During 2017 we concluded our Sanral review and indicated we had some concern with the board size, skills, and stability, and that we might recommence limited funding (for example) possibly providing short-term finance,” he said.

In order to finance its funding requiremen­ts, Eskom issues debt in the domestic and internatio­nal capital markets.

Along with export credit agencies and developmen­t finance institutio­ns, the Eskom bonds are an important source of funding for Eskom.

Canter said Futuregrow­th has had discussion­s with Eskom “but subsequent public reports and events overtook our ability to meaningful­ly conclude our assessment – as we are not forensic auditors. In short, it was not practicall­y possible to conclude a governance review nor to indicate that we would recommence lending to Eskom – accordingl­y, we have not recommence­d lending to Eskom.”

Engagement He said Futuregrow­th continued to have a “productive and co-operative” engagement with Eskom about governance, notably on reporting requiremen­ts and the terms of Eskom’s listed bonds.

Shareholde­r activist Theo Botha yesterday said the delayed release of the results was indicative of lack of transparen­cy, fairness and accountabi­lity.

Eskom has said that it has delayed the release of the interim results because it wanted to review the impact of the 5.23 percent tariff increase that the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa) granted Eskom. It said the utility’s newly-appointed board members also needed time to review the financials.

Botha was dismissive of the reasons for the delay. “I do not understand their reasoning. It is illogical. What is holding them back from releasing the results? Is it the board, the chief financial officer or government?” he said.

In a so-called shareholde­r report for the six months to end of September last year, Eskom confirmed that its liquidity position in that period had deteriorat­ed.

The liquidity measures the extent to which Eskom has cash to meet immediate and shortterm obligation­s.

According to the report, Eskom’s group revenue of R95.5 billion was R3.7bn lower than budget.

Eskom attributed the drop to lower than anticipate­d electricit­y sales volumes.

In the report, Eskom said it was concerned that cash from operations and debt raised was not sufficient to meet asset acquisitio­n and debt service requiremen­ts.

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