Cape Times

SAGARMATHA LISTING

The birth of an African tech giant may surprise a few, but benefit Africa

- Sizwe Dlamini Sizwe Dlamini is a multimedia journalist at Business Report

NASPERS last month completed its accelerate­d offering of Tencent shares, reducing its stake in Tencent by 2 percent from 33.2 percent to 31.2 percent and the sale yielded $9.8 billion (R116.25bn).

That is equivalent to about 5.6 percent of Naspers’s stake in the Chinese platform company with its fingers in every pie from e-commerce to artificial intelligen­ce.

Naspers moved into broadcasti­ng in the 1980s with the establishm­ent of what is today the MultiChoic­e platform, before becoming a successful tech investor, with stakes in the likes of India’s Flipkart, Germany’s Delivery Hero and Russia’s Mail. ru.

But it was only after Naspers bought a $32 million stake in Tencent that it realised some serious growth, leading to Naspers being valued at about $125.5bn today. Naspers’s stake in Tencent is worth about $175bn, meaning its value leans heavily on its Tencent stake.

Naspers then promised not to sell any more of its Tencent shares, at least for the next three years and for good reason.

Have you heard about the businessma­n Richard Li Tzar-kai who missed the big boat?

Before Tencent was listed, Li, the second son of tycoon Li Ka-shing, took a 20 percent stake in 1999 for $2.2m. He sold out to Naspers after a year for $12.6m – a six-fold return.

That was not a bad investment at all, in fact, that was a pretty good return. However, Naspers turned out to be the bigger winners, with those shares now worth about $73bn.

Richest five

If Li had held on to those shares he may be now among the world’s top five richest people, according to Asia Times.

Tencent, founded in November 1998, was unprofitab­le for the first three years of its existence and its income was originally derived solely from advertisin­g and premium users of its messenger product QQ.

Being a multi-sided platform, the company had various options to explore, as long as it had investor backing, and boy, was the patience worth it!

Tencent found its sweet spot in online gaming, among other services, and today investors such as Naspers are smiling all the way to the bank.

That is the nature of platform companies. Jacob Morgan, speaker, futurist and author of The Future of Work: Attract New Talent, Build Better Leaders, and Create a

Competitiv­e Organizati­on explains: “A platform company partners and incorporat­es technology from multiple corporatio­ns, partners, nonprofits, and educationa­l institutio­ns to drive business performanc­e and build ecosystems.

“While this concept is not new, it is growing and evolving. Instead of only concentrat­ing on what is going on inside a company, the focus is shifted to building networks outside of the organisati­on. These networks assist in building a stronger, more profitable platform company.”

It is on this premise that integrated African technology platform company, Sagarmatha Technologi­es, was founded.

The company aspires to become the African leader in e-commerce, digital media and syndicated content and technology ventures as part of the 4th Industrial Revolution (4IR).

It owns 95 percent of African News Agency (ANA) – a content syndicatio­n and news wire agency; 83.3 percent of Loot Online – a general merchandis­e online retailer; 60 percent of IOL Property JV – an online classified­s business specialisi­ng in property; 100 percent of Independen­t Online, an online news business; and 100 percent of Sagarmatha Enterprise Solutions targeting global innovation and growth areas of ICT and acquiring or partnering with experts in the space.

This looks to be a really good mix and enough to start up a multi-sided platform company. Sagarmatha Technologi­es plans to become the first African unicorn company to list on the JSE next Friday, a move that has drawn significan­t attention since it was announced.

The African technology platform group, which committed R100m to train 5 000 computer programmer­s in Africa over the next five years, said in a pre-listing statement that it planned to raise R7.5bn in a share placement of 189.3 million shares at R39.62 a share.

A feat never achieved by an African unicorn. Could there be an internatio­nal listing in the pipeline? Domestic and internatio­nal investors are watching… and so are we.

Sagarmatha said in a pre-listing statement that it planned to raise R7.5bn in a share placement of 189.3 million shares at R39.62 a share.

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 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Tencent Holdings’ headquarte­rs under constructi­on in Shenzhen, China, in this file photo. Naspers’s investment in the company paid off handsomely.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Tencent Holdings’ headquarte­rs under constructi­on in Shenzhen, China, in this file photo. Naspers’s investment in the company paid off handsomely.
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