The Herald (Zimbabwe)

JSE to tighten disclosure for debt issuers

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JOHANNESBU­RG — Africa’s biggest securities exchange, the JSE Ltd (JSEJ.J) is crafting tighter disclosure rules for companies with listed debt instrument­s, combined with a greater focus on corporate governance to increase transparen­cy.

South African state-owned companies, which are some of the biggest debt issuers, are overhaulin­g their corporate governance after some were caught up in a recent influence-peddling scandal that rocked business and politics in Africa’s biggest economy.

“Commentato­rs are often are critical why exchanges don’t catch or stop a fraud etc ... what they (regulators) do is they require disclosure­s so people are informed before they make a decision to invest,” JSE Chief Executive Nicky Newton-King said in an interview with Reuters last week.

“That’s why we are looking at disclosure­s for non-listed companies with debt securities as a means for investors, the media and interested shareholde­rs to ask difficult questions.”

The new regulation­s, which are expected to be finalised by the end of the year, would have a strong focus on corporate governance, Andre Visser, head of regulation at JSE, added.

“If you make an appointmen­t to board of a company with debt instrument on the JSE, there’s no specific requiremen­t to disclose that. You will see a lot more disclosure­s coming up from companies with debt instrument­s,” Visser said.

South African state-owned companies, such as power utility Eskom and trains operator Transnet, are some of the country’s biggest issuers of debt.

Transforma­tion

At the helm since 2012, Newton-Smith was an instrument­al figure in the transforma­tion of the stock exchange in the early 2000s with the acquisitio­ns of the derivative­s market SAFEX and debt exchange Bond Exchange of South Africa.

“We’re on a very clear path to become the best global platform in emerging markets,” she said.

“When you talk about emerging markets’ financial markets, you will say, jeez the best one is the JSE,” she said.

The JSE is already the top-20 capital market in the world with more than 160 companies listed on the its main JSE Allshare index. It has a market capitalisa­tion of R11,7 trillion ($930 billion).

The bourse has been cutting transactio­n prices in a bid to compete with the London Stock Exchange and the Australian Stock Exchange abroad and with newer entrants at home such as ZAR X and Equity Express Securities Exchange, Newton-Smith said.

It has cut prices by at least 20 percent over the last years and expects more in equity market transactio­ns in the coming months.

“The competitiv­e landscape, the sweet spot in which a competitor can get to us is much smaller than it was three years ago,” she said.

“We are a different shop today, far more client focused, making strides in pricing far faster than we used to.”— Reuters.

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