Cape Times

Vodacom may raise BEE stake by R17.5bn

New deal for previous partners

- Siseko Njobeni

MOBILE operator Vodacom yesterday said it was planning to splurge R17.5 billion to raise its black economic empowermen­t (BEE) stake in a deal that could see its black shareholde­rs cashing in on a R3bn windfall.

The group said the new deal would see its BEE partners of Royal Bafokeng Holdings (RBH), Thebe Investment Corporatio­n and YeboYethu exchange their current shareholdi­ng for a shareholdi­ng of between 5.8 percent and 6.25 percent in Vodacom South Africa. It said the interests of the BEE partners and that of a newly formed staff scheme would be consolidat­ed into a new YeboYethu BEE structure that would own shares in Vodacom Group.

Broader markets

“Our intention was always to move our BEE investors from being shareholde­rs in Vodacom South Africa to a shareholdi­ng at the group level, thereby giving them exposure to the broader local and internatio­nal markets in which Vodacom Group trades. “YeboYethu’s shareholdi­ng in Vodacom Group will increase to around 6.25 percent, giving Vodacom Group an effective BEE shareholdi­ng of 20 percent,” said Vodacom Group chief executive Shameel Joosub.

The transactio­n comes as its existing R7.5bn BEE ownership scheme comes to an end in October after 10 years.

Joosub said the deal would preserve and enhance Vodacom’s BEE ownership, and also consolidat­e BEE shareholdi­ng into a single entity.

“Shareholdi­ng is now at Vodacom Group level, which provides exposure to South African and internatio­nal operations including (Kenyan mobile operator) Safaricom,” said Joosub. In addition to opening local and internatio­nal opportunit­ies for black investors, the company decided to move black shareholdi­ng from Vodacom South Africa to the group level.

The original BEE deal had delivered significan­t value to the company’s BEE partners. Its unwind would deliver about R7.5bn, making it one of the most profitable and successful value realisatio­ns by any BEE transactio­n concluded in South Africa to date, he said.

A shareholde­r who invested the minimum of R2 500 in 2008 would unlock approximat­ely R16 000 of value through this deal, Joosub noted.

“Part of this value will be returned to our existing BEE shareholde­rs in the form of an upfront special dividend of R3bn, which provides substantia­l liquidity for our partners and amounts to 2.7 times the original capital they invested into the 2008 deal,” he said.

Zarina Bassa, YeboYethu chairperso­n, said yesterday that the transactio­n would create an immediate value for more than 82 800 black investors through the cash dividend. She said YeboYethu shareholde­rs would meet and vote on the deal on August 17.

Vodacom said the new BEE transactio­n would see the Vodacom South Africa BEE shareholde­rs settle their outstandin­g vendor funding. RBH and

Thebe would then exchange their shareholdi­ng in Vodacom South Africa for shares in YeboYethu.

It said a new staff scheme, funded by a R1.05bn contributi­on from Vodacom Group, would acquire YeboYethu shares from the existing Vodacom South Africa employee stock ownership plan and subscribe for additional YeboYethu shares.

Vodacom shares declined 2.87 percent on the JSE yesterday to close at R140.31.

 ??  ?? A logo outside the headquarte­rs of Vodacom Group in Johannesbu­rg. Vodacom says it plans to spend R17.5 billion to raise its stake in black economic empowermen­t.
A logo outside the headquarte­rs of Vodacom Group in Johannesbu­rg. Vodacom says it plans to spend R17.5 billion to raise its stake in black economic empowermen­t.
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