Cape Times

Shoprite shares dive on JSE

Wiese offloads 17m shares of his stake in supermarke­t

- Sandile Mchunu

BILLIONAIR­E investor Christo Wiese on Tuesday offloaded R3.6 billion worth of his stake in Shoprite Holdings in a move that stunned the market and sent the company shares into a tailspin.

Wiese placed 17 million shares at R210 each in Africa’s biggest supermarke­t chain to institutio­nal investors through Titan Premier Investment­s, an investment vehicle he owns, in order to raise cash. The sold shares represent 2.9 percent of the company’s issued stock.

Shoprite fell 5.74 percent on the JSE to close at R211.95 on the back of the sale..

Nishalin Govender, a portfolio manager at Citadel, said that the announceme­nt sent panic among institutio­nal investors, sending the share down 5.74 percent to close at R211.95 from Tuesday’s closing price of R224.89 a share.

“We hold Shoprite and believe that the current price, and thus the price offered, is reasonable, as the group has sold down significan­tly since March,” Govender said.

“The group remains well managed, as evidenced by class leading operating margins and return on capital. Shoprite is in a strong position to negotiate a competitiv­e local food retailing environmen­t, given its scale, strong management team and advantages in supply chain and procuremen­t.”

Wiese has been on a massive selling spree since the near collapse of Steinhoff Internatio­nal in December.

The Shoprite shares will be sold through an accelerate­d bookbuild, in which Morgan Stanley, Rand Merchant Bank and Barclays Africa Group’s Absa Capital are the joint book runners.

Wiese has been selling assets to raise money since the troubled retailer Steinhoff admitted to accounting irregulari­ties in December.

He has sold nearly R4.2bn worth of Shoprite stock over three separate deals in the wake of the scandal.

However, the analysts believe despite Wiese and Steinhoff going through some challenges, Shoprite was still a good opportunit­y for investors.

Nesan Nair, a senior portfolio manager at Sasfin Securities, said the market was concerned about Wiese’s overhang, as he has problems across most of his investment­s.

Nair said even Steinhoff Africa Retail could create more short-term volatility for Shoprite, as Wiese was forced to raise liquidity.

Nair, however, stressed that Shoprite remained a good investment for the long-term. “They are a first class retailer, with a deep pool of talented managers that really understand how to retail in Africa,” Nair said.

Wiese is Shoprite’s current chairperso­n.

Govender said Shoprite would bounce back, given the strategic direction on which the group has embarked a number of years ago.

He said despite the panic yesterday, investors would likely reap rewards in the future. “We also like the defensive quality of this retailer relative to others, as we continue to believe that the marginal SA consumer continues to face significan­t strain,” Govender said.

“Christo Wiese will likely remain chairperso­n and non-executive director at Shoprite as well as key anchor shareholde­r, despite the recent share disposal,” Govender said.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A shopper outside a Shoprite store in Johannesbu­rg. Shoprite shares took a big knock after Christo Wiese’s share disposal on Tuesday.
PHOTO: REUTERS A shopper outside a Shoprite store in Johannesbu­rg. Shoprite shares took a big knock after Christo Wiese’s share disposal on Tuesday.
 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Billionair­e investor and current chairperso­n of Shoprite Christo Wiese.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Billionair­e investor and current chairperso­n of Shoprite Christo Wiese.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa