Sunday Tribune

Stadio Holdings education group growth still on track

- SANDILE MCHUNU sandile.mchunu@inl.co.za

PRIVATE education group Stadio Holdings has said its growth projection­s remained on track despite facing mounting challenges as a result of the Covid-19 outbreak.

The group said it had set itself a target of 56 000 students by 2026.

Chief executive Chris Vorster said Stadio needed to grow its learner base at least 8 percent each year in order to reach its goal.

Voster said while the group achieved a 10 percent increase during the first half of the financial year, Covid-19 forced it to reconsider some of its capital expenditur­e programmes.

“We decided to freeze all new uncommitte­d staff appointmen­ts, as well as freezing all uncommitte­d capital expenditur­es during the rest of the year,” Vorster said.

Studio, an investment holding company, which was unbundled from Curro in 2017 and listed separately on the JSE, saw its learner numbers increasing 7 percent to 31 869 at the end of December 2020.

The group has ambitions of growing its student numbers to

100 000 on demand in the higher education sector.

Its brands consist of Stadio (formerly called Embury Institute), Lisof, Southern Business School (SBS), Afda and Milpark.

Voster said Stadio had identified greenfield expansion opportunit­ies to develop multifacul­ty campuses that could accommodat­e between 3 000 and 5 000 students in strategic locations.

“The constructi­on of the Stadio Centurion site was 40 percent complete and previously we anticipate­d opening it in January 2021, while Stadio Durbanvill­e was anticipate­d to be opened in 2022.

“The Covid-19 pandemic has made us rethink and possibly shift the opening of these facilities to a later stage,” Vorster said.

In February, Stadio told its shareholde­rs in a trading guidance that it expected its core headline earnings per share to increase between 4 percent and 24 percent in the six months to end June.

Vorster said collection­s in the first half of the year rose compared to last year, despite the Covid-19 disruption­s.

“Collection­s have been good in the first half, maybe we will experience challenges in the second half as the country experience­s more job losses going forward,” Vorster said.

He added that there were no disruption­s in its academic programme as 80 percent of its students were distance-learning students.

“Our academic teams from all our brands took initiative and implemente­d plans to ensure that all our students complete their 2020 academic year when the lockdown was announced at the end of March.

“We are fortunate to have a brand like Afda, whereby assessment­s are production-based, while the distance learning in our group has helped us to weather the Covid-19 storm,” he said.

Stadio rose/declined XXX percent on the JSE to close at RXXX.

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