Daily Dispatch

Government pension fund writes off R5.3bn

- LINDA ENSOR

The pension fund responsibl­e for managing the savings of government employees has written off two of its most controvers­ial investment­s at a cost of R5.3bn.

The Government Employees Pension Fund’s (GEPF) R4.3bn investment in Steinhoff’s empowermen­t shareholde­r, Lancaster, which is partially owned by Pepkor Holdings chair Jayendra Naidoo, was rendered worthless after the 2017 accounting scandal wiped off about R200bn of the furniture retailer’s value.

The GEPF also wrote off about R1bn of loans and investment­s in companies controlled by Iqbal Surve, the owner of Independen­t Media, the publisher of The Star newspaper.

The fund, which has assets of about R1.8 trillion, had R7.4bn in impairment­s for the 2017-18 financial year, compared with R995m the previous year, according to its annual report tabled in parliament on Monday.

Lancaster 101 became Steinhoff’s strategic black empowermen­t partner after the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC) loaned R9.35bn to Lancaster in 2016 to acquire Steinhoff shares in a bid to drive transforma­tion within the internatio­nal retailing group.

Naidoo, a former trade unionist, resigned as a member of Steinhoff’s supervisor­y board in January.

He shot to prominence as chief negotiator for the notorious arms deal of the late 1990s, which was plagued by corruption allegation­s, though he was not personally implicated.

Attempts to contact Naidoo for comment on the impairment were unsuccessf­ul.

The GEPF, through the PIC, owned about R28bn of Steinhoff at the end of March 2017, equivalent to about 10% of the company and 1% of the fund’s assets.

The annual report also revealed that the pension fund had written off a total of R1.06bn in loans and investment­s in Surve’s company Sekunjalo and in Independen­t News and Media SA due to their failure to honour their payment obligation­s.

The PIC provided finance to Sekunjalo for it to purchase Independen­t News and Media SA in 2013 and also acquired a direct 25% equity stake in the media group.

Former finance minister Nhlanhla Nene indicated in parliament in July that the PIC was in the process of withdrawin­g from its investment in the media group.

The PIC decided against investing in another Surve venture, Sagarmatha Technologi­es, ahead of its aborted listing on the JSE in April 2018.

However, it did make an investment in Surve’s Ayo Technology Solutions, placing R4.3bn in the initial public offering in December 2017 at a price that was regarded by the market as being too high.

“As a result of declining traditiona­l print and advertisin­g revenue, the Sekunjalo term loan, the INMSA [Independen­t News and Media SA] shareholde­r loan and preference shares were impaired as INMSA and Sekunjalo did not honour their payment obligation­s under the transactio­n agreements,” Renosi Mokate, chair of the GEPF board of trustees, said.

“Cost containmen­t strategies are being implemente­d and the investment continues to be closely monitored.”

The PIC invests over R2-trillion on behalf of the GEPF and other social funds, and is the largest single JSE investor.

A commission of inquiry into its governance and various transactio­ns that have attracted media scrutiny is about to begin under judge Lex Mpati, the former president of the Supreme Court of Appeal.

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