Business Day

Trencor rejects minorities’ bid

- Ann Crotty Writer at Large crottya@bdfm.co.za

The board of specialist investment group Trencor has refused to put resolution­s proposed by minority shareholde­rs on the agenda for the upcoming annual general meeting.

The board of specialist investment group Trencor has refused to put resolution­s proposed by minority shareholde­rs on the agenda for the upcoming annual general meeting.

The refusal could lead to an outbreak of hostilitie­s between the minority shareholde­rs, who have launched the first action yet in terms of section 65 of the Companies Act, and the board.

The resolution­s are aimed at removing by-laws that protect the directors and management of Textainer, Trencor’s most valuable investment.

Roddy Sparks, lead independen­t nonexecuti­ve director of Trencor, said the board did not have sufficient time to determine whether two resolution­s by shareholde­r activist Chris Logan and two other investors complied with the Companies Act. “We have thus decided not to table the proposed resolution­s at this stage,” Sparks said in a letter to Logan.

Sparks does hold out some hope for Logan’s action, stating: “Once the board has reached a view on the proposed resolution­s’ compliance with the relevant provisions of the act, and in the event that it is satisfied that they do in fact comply, the board will naturally table the proposed resolution­s as required by the act, and would be prepared to convene a special shareholde­rs meeting for this purpose.”

The resolution­s proposed by Logan have significan­t implicatio­ns for the governance of chronicall­y underperfo­rming global container group Textainer, in which Trencor has a 48% stake.

In financial 2017 Textainer, the world’s third-largest listed container group, achieved return on equity of just 3.7%. This compared with industry leader Triton’s 13.2% and the 12.3% reported by CAI Internatio­nal, the sixth largest.

Textainer’s weak results have dragged down Trencor’s profit and share price, which at R32.70 has fallen 32% in 2018 and is 46% below the R60 reached three years ago.

Logan is calling for the Trencor directors to remove extraordin­ary powers enjoyed by the Textainer board. Logan believes these powers, granted through provisions in Textainer’s by-laws, have sheltered the management from the consequenc­es of poor performanc­e.

Provisions contained in Textainer’s by-laws make it difficult for a third party to acquire control of the company without the consent of the board. In addition there are by-laws that make it difficult to hold Textainer directors to account for related-party transactio­ns as well as restrictio­ns on shareholde­rs taking legal action against executives and directors.

Logan told Business Day on Tuesday that the by-laws represente­d a fundamenta­l contravent­ion of basic corporate governance as they prevent shareholde­rs from holding executives to account.

The shareholde­r activist said his resolution proposal adhered to all the requiremen­ts of the Companies Act and he fears the Trencor board is trying to stall the matter.

Logan believes there is adequate time before the August 14 AGM to provide shareholde­rs with the informatio­n needed to vote on the resolution­s. Logan is concerned the Trencor board will drag the matter out until it completes the planned unbundling of Textainer. The unbundling will involve New York-listed Textainer getting a secondary listing on the JSE and Trencor distributi­ng its 48% stake to Trencor shareholde­rs.

Once the Textainer shares have been distribute­d, the Trencor board will no longer have influence over Textainer and will not be in a position to challenge the controvers­ial by-laws.

Coronation Fund Managers, which holds 12% of Trencor, would not comment on the shareholde­r action. Investec Asset Management, which also holds Trencor shares, said its policy was not to speak on individual companies.

The Public Investment Corporatio­n, which owns 11% of the company, did not respond to requests for comment.

THE BOARD … WOULD BE PREPARED TO CONVENE A SPECIAL SHAREHOLDE­RS MEETING FOR THIS PURPOSE

 ?? /The Times /Marianne Schwankhar­t ?? Becalmed: A container ship docks at Durban Port. The performanc­e of Textainer has been chronicall­y below par.
/The Times /Marianne Schwankhar­t Becalmed: A container ship docks at Durban Port. The performanc­e of Textainer has been chronicall­y below par.

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