Financial Mail

SA MUST DIG ITSELF OUT OF THIS HOLE

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If you think the incredible shrinking JSE — another two delistings confirmed on Monday this week — is merely the sign of a cyclical slump in the listings cycle, then perhaps it’s worth taking a read through the Australian financial press. While more than a dozen companies in SA have skulked off the exchange this year, with more set to follow, the Australian stock exchange is about to break all records for initial public offerings in 2021, with 63 companies listing on the ASX in the first six months. This is on track to beat 2020’s 78 IPOs, where $5.3bn was raised by companies taking their business public.

Many of these companies are in the resources sector, but the spread of industries represente­d is wide and covers financial services, industrial­s and technology. Contrast that to SA where, in 2020, 19 companies delisted from the JSE.

Over a longer period, the JSE’s performanc­e looks even worse: it has thinned out from around 776 companies 30 years ago, to a little over 300 today — excluding this week’s soon-to-leave small caps CSG and Alaris (as we detail on page 44), as well as a handful of companies in the throes of delisting proposals.

It would be hypocritic­al to blame the JSE for the continued exodus of small- to mid-cap stocks. It doesn’t set the price of shares, after all. And fund managers have been vocal in drawing investor attention to the huge value in dirt-cheap SA Inc stocks, but they have been ignored.

The exchange has also drawn flak from investors for allowing large (and small) corporate failures on its watch — notably Steinhoff and Tongaat — which has obviously led to more stringent listings regulation­s and governance. Now companies are complainin­g that the regulation­s are onerous, costly and stifle entreprene­urship.

Clearly, balancing these competing imperative­s is tough, but the exchange needs to up its game in terms of ease of transactio­ns and their cost, if it wants to stay competitiv­e. The success of brokerage platforms such as EasyEquiti­es indicates there is a vast hunger from retail investors to get involved in the active trading of shares. And it is still the case that the listed price of a share or bond is generally the final sanctum in what constitute­s fair market value, which is crucial for the investors of pensioners’ money.

But what if the market doesn’t fairly rate a company, as is apparently the case in SA? What else is that telling us? Simply, that SA is making a hash of itself as an investable destinatio­n, with its strangulat­ing levels of red tape, incoherent policy, anti-business ideology and a labour market that excludes skills and protects the unproducti­ve.

And as long as the dynamism in world stock markets trends

toward technology, the JSE will naturally suffer: SA isn’t noted for a booming tech sector, and it follows that start-ups are not being created in their thousands as they are in the US, or the Far East.

But there is one sector where we really should pull global capital, given our endowments as a country — mining. Instead, the opposite is happening and it’s almost entirely the fault of unclear and punitive government policy. That’s evident from the listings trend in the sector: as Mining Weekly recently pointed out, in 1980, when the gold price surged, the JSE had half of the world’s mining market capitalisa­tion listed on it. Now we have just 40 companies, and no prospect that new entrants will seek to raise capital here either as long as the state cannot get to grips with processing a backlog of mining rights applicatio­ns. This is, if not a quick win, a relatively straightfo­rward one.

SA’s leaders and regulators must confront our declining relevance or we will all lose out.

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