Business Day

Maponya buys into firm planning new bourse for SA

- PHAKAMISA NDZAMELA Finance Writer ndzamelap@bdfm.co.za

We have acquired a 15% stake. We have always had an appetite for the financial services space

THE Maponya Group has acquired a 15% stake in 4 Africa Exchange, a company looking to start another bourse in SA early next year.

Founded by entreprene­ur Richard Maponya and his late wife Marina, the Maponya Group has already invested an undisclose­d amount of cash in 4 Africa Exchange as it hopes to be awarded a licence by the Financial Services Board (FSB).

This signals that the group, led by businesswo­man Chichi Maponya, is confident about the prospects of 4 Africa Exchange operating a competing exchange to the JSE in SA.

“We have acquired a 15% stake … We have always had an appetite for the financial services space. My father was one of the founders of African Bank … My mother sat on the board of Barclays and DBSA (Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa),” said Ms Maponya, who is also chairwoman of Brand SA.

The deal diversifie­s the group beyond its existing portfolio of assets including retail, property and poultry.

“We think there is an opportunit­y and space for our product and our business (4 Africa Exchange ),” said Ms Maponya.

Agricultur­al firm NWK, whose shares trade over the counter; Trifecta Capital, which offers shareholde­r administra­tion; Interconti­nental Trust, a financial and fiduciary services provider; and Global Environmen­t Markets, a developer of exchange trading platforms; are part of the consortium that has set up 4 Africa Exchange.

They plan to cater for overthe-counter traded companies, such as small and medium enterprise­s, black economic empowermen­t schemes and agricultur­e co-operatives that were declared to be operating illegal exchanges by the FSB.

It was making progress with its licence applicatio­n to operate as a stock exchange, 4 Africa Exchange said.

The FSB had looked at its applicatio­n and had now invited the public to comment on it.

“We are hoping to go live in the second quarter of next year. The ability to operate the exchange is dependent on the FSB granting the licence,” 4 Africa Exchange CEO Fay Mukaddam said yesterday.

She said 4 Africa Exchange was looking at selling more shares to another black-owned group. It could not sell more than 15% to the Maponya Group as the regulation does not allow for a single shareholde­r to own more than 15% of an exchange.

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