Financial Mail

When the PIC said ‘no’

The investment firm’s voting record shows it questioned the independen­ce of Steinhoff Africa Retail directors

- Ann Crotty crottya@bdfm.co.za

The Public Investment Corp (PIC), which manages almost R2 trillion of assets, voted against a record-breaking nine resolution­s at the first ever AGM of Steinhoff Africa Retail (Star) in mid-march.

Star, which is the African retail arm of Steinhoff Internatio­nal and is in the process of being renamed Pepkor, accounted for 14% of the PIC’S “no” votes at AGMS in the three months to March 2018.

The publicatio­n of the PIC’S voting record for the first quarter — within a few months of the reporting period instead of several months to a year later — marks a welcome return to the early days of the PIC’S shareholde­r activism.

In 2008 the PIC was the first institutio­nal investor to disclose how it voted at shareholde­r meetings. As the largest asset manager in SA, it was able to compel other institutio­ns to follow suit. Sanlam is now the only large institutio­n that refuses to disclose its voting.

In total, the PIC declined to support 64 of the 539 resolution­s it voted on during the three months.

In what was likely to have been prompted by general anger and concern about the greater Steinhoff scandal, the PIC voted against the re-election of four Star directors and the appointmen­t of a fifth. It also voted against placing shares under the control of directors and against endorsing the remunerati­on policy and remunerati­on implementa­tion report.

The PIC holds only 0.21% of

Star, but it has a hefty indirect exposure through its R9bn investment in Lancaster, the BEE consortium

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controlled by Star chair Jayendra Naidoo.

In its September 2017 prelisting statement, Star referred to the placement of R6.2bn of shares with Lancaster, giving it an 8.83% stake in the soon-to-be-listed retailer.

A year earlier Lancaster had bought 60m Steinhoff shares at R75.98 apiece.

At the AGM the PIC voted against the re-election of Danie van der Merwe and Steve Müller to the board, and the appointmen­t of

Louis du Preez. It also voted against the re-election of Allen Swiegers, Johann Cilliers and Müller to the audit committee. In each case it questioned the independen­ce of the director.

Director independen­ce is one of three major issues likely to earn a “no” vote; the other two are auditor independen­ce and an inadequate remunerati­on policy. In many cases — Reunert, Coronation, Oceana, Tiger Brands and Transactio­n Capital — the PIC voted against resolution­s relating to one or more of these issues for the second successive year.

The PIC did not respond to requests for comment on what further action it could or would take to effect the desired change.

The bad news for institutio­nal investors such as Sanlam that are struggling with current disclosure practices is that things look set to become even more challengin­g.

Fiona Reynolds, CEO of the Unsupporte­d Principles for Responsibl­e Investment, says the organisati­on now wants investors to publicly declare how they intend to vote at upcoming meetings.

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