Sunday Times

Downgrade kills first big deal

Potential Pioneer Foods investor gets cold feet after ratings shocks

- PALESA VUYOLWETHU TSHANDU, PERICLES ANETOS and LUTHO MTONGANA

PIONEER Foods is the first confirmed corporate casualty of South Africa’s credit-ratings downgrade. The food giant has announced the collapse of a deal that would have created Africa’s largest consumer goods company.

Immediatel­y after the announceme­nt of the downgrade “everything just stalled”, Pioneer Foods CEO Phil Roux said on Friday.

“Panic ensued and news flow was terribly negative abroad and consequent­ly they [the multinatio­nal] advised that while they are a massive organisati­on they just cannot, given the state of investment required, deepen their risk in any shape, manner or form,” said Roux.

The share price of Pioneer, the second-largest fast-moving consumer goods group, fell as much as 7% after the announceme­nt on Friday.

The stock recovered somewhat to end the day 4.4% weaker at R169.

Roux, who is under a nondisclos­ure contract, could not name the multinatio­nal or the value of the investment but said that before the downgrade, the company was optimistic about South Africa’s prospects.

The parties had finalised 95% of the deal, including the contractua­l agreements and pricing.

As a result, Pioneer Foods curtailed six capital investment­s planned for the country “until confidence is restored with us as businessme­n, that this is the place where you can get the desired return that you need”.

South Africa’s foreign-currency debt was downgraded to junk by S&P Global Ratings and Fitch after President Jacob Zuma’s cabinet reshuffle, which involved the removal of finance minister Pravin Gordhan and his deputy Mcebisi Jonas from Treasury and the appointmen­t of new Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba.

The downgrades came within a week of each other after Gigaba’s appointmen­t, with Fitch taking the further step of downgradin­g South Africa’s local-currency debt.

Kevin Cron, head of corporate, mergers and acquisitio­ns (M&A) and securities at Norton Rose Fulbright, said that the downgrade was not good news for the mergers and acquisitio­ns.

Foreign investors “may be hesitant to invest in South Africa and that would be a depressant on M&A”.

However, said Cron, if the rand weakened in the near future South Africa could become an attractive investment destinatio­n for those who wish to take a “longer-term view of the country and continent”.

With economic conditions expected to get tougher, companies would struggle, which might offer buying opportunit­ies to companies looking to expand or get into particular sectors.

South Africa has been a good investment opportunit­y as many multinatio­nals see the country as the gateway to the rest of Africa.

Last year, global beer brewer AB InBev acquired SABMiller for $103million.

Norton Rose Fulbright was approached on Friday morning by a “major private-equity fund for a potential deal with a South African CONFIDENCE SHATTERED: Phil Roux, CEO of Pioneer Foods company”, which Cron said indicated deals were there to be made for investors with a risk appetite.

ENS chairman Michael Katz said it was still seeing deals being done and coming in but most were South African with no foreign element.

It was difficult at the moment to identify what impact the downgrade would have on M&A in South Africa, Katz said, but there were M&As in the private-equity field.

“In the equity-capital market there seems to be quite a bit of interest and we have been approached by foreign players to work with them on some equity-capital transactio­ns.”

If the currency weakens South Africa could become attractive

South African companies could also go through a period of distressed sales if economic conditions worsened. Several economists revised their growth forecasts downwards after the decisions of the ratings agencies.

Standard Bank economist Thanda Sithole said political instabilit­y would keep weighing on investor confidence and the country would not get much foreign direct investment before the ANC’s elective conference in December. Sithole said that South Africa had low domestic savings to fund business expansion so it would need foreign direct investment to boost growth.

On the chances of the Pioneer transactio­n being revisited if South Africa emerged from junk status, Vunani Capital Markets equity analyst Anthony Clark said: “Potentiall­y, yes, but given how long it takes some countries to get out of junk, no company is going to wait that long.

“They [Pioneer] were looking for springboar­ds to enter the European market. I think this transactio­n would have given them that, but the government’s interventi­on has caused fright in internatio­nal capital markets and as such their ability to raise capital offshore has been extinguish­ed.”

Roux said Pioneer would reconsider South African investment­s. “We will use this as an inflection point to revisit and make some conscious decisions of where we wish to invest next. We will remain particular­ly cautious about deepening investment in South Africa amidst instabilit­y.”

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