Daily Dispatch

BEE code change shocks industry

‘It’s going to drop companies on the scorecard’

- By CAROL PATON

THE trade and industry department issued an unexpected “clarificat­ion notice” on Tuesday that broad-based empowermen­t and employee share ownership schemes will no longer count as much as individual share ownership on the black economic empowermen­t (BEE) scorecard.

The notice astounded lawyers and verificati­on agencies and will substantia­lly alter ratings of companies that have placed a portion of their ownership in the hands of employees or community organisati­ons.

The notice also set out to clarify a range of issues relating to the new codes of good practice‚ due to come into effect on May 1‚ and explain their staggered implementa­tion.

Of the 25 points on the new scorecard that can be earned for black ownership‚ broad-based and employee share ownership schemes can contribute only a maximum of three points. They cannot count towards the voting rights of black people or the economic interest they hold in the company‚ which are the other elements on the scorecard.

Under the previous scorecard‚ broad-based and employee ownership schemes were used in the general calculatio­n of black ownership‚ provided they were manifested in voting rights and reflected genuine economic interests‚ such as dividend payments and the ability to trade shares. The change was not canvassed with stakeholde­rs or verificati­on agencies.

Keith Levenstein‚ chief executive of empowermen­t verificati­on agency Econoserve, said it would affect hundreds if not thousands of broadbased schemes.

“It is going to instantly drop these companies on the scorecard by as much as 20 points and imply they do not meet the element of ownership‚” he said.

Empowerdex described the news as a “big shocker”, and Mazar’s managing partner, Tony Balshaw, called it “devastatin­g”.

“A significan­t number of non-listed multinatio­nals and large- and medium-sized enterprise­s have done empowermen­t deals based on employee or broad ownership schemes. The effect on them could be to drop at least three ratings levels of the eight‚” said Balshaw.

Chief director of the department, Takalani Tambani, said: “The message is [that] government views the ownership as important to transform the economy. For us to effectivel­y do that‚ we want to see black people participat­ing meaningful­ly in the core of the economy.

“Passive shareholdi­ng will not be able to transform this economy. Passive shareholde­rs are not the real drivers of the business.”

Tambani said the new measure was not a major change from the way broad-based ownership was measured in the past.

But Balshaw said it had never been the interpreta­tion of law firms advising on multi-billion-rand empowermen­t deals that broad-based ownership was not real ownership.

Levenstein said many companies had used broad-based schemes and trusts as empowermen­t fronts as the schemes did not allow members to trade their shares or result in financial benefits. — BDLive

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? RESISTING BARGAINS: Consumer confidence plummeted in the first quarter of this year‚ suggesting that consumers were less eager to spend despite lower inflation and slower rises in food prices
Picture: GETTY IMAGES RESISTING BARGAINS: Consumer confidence plummeted in the first quarter of this year‚ suggesting that consumers were less eager to spend despite lower inflation and slower rises in food prices
 ?? Picture: RUSSELL ROBERTS ?? DOMINO EFFECT: Keith Levenstein‚ chief executive of empowermen­t verificati­on agency Econoserve, says the revised black empowermen­t scorecard will possibly affect thousands of broad-based schemes
Picture: RUSSELL ROBERTS DOMINO EFFECT: Keith Levenstein‚ chief executive of empowermen­t verificati­on agency Econoserve, says the revised black empowermen­t scorecard will possibly affect thousands of broad-based schemes

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