Business Day

Pension fund ‘was misled on Ayo’

- Warrren Thompson Financial Services Writer thompsonw@businessli­ve.co.za

The fund that looks after the pensions of 1.7-million current and former public servants was misled by the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC) about its R4.3bn investment in Ayo Technology Solutions, an inquiry into the state-owned asset manager heard on Monday.

The PIC, on behalf of the Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF), invested in Ayo in December 2017. The deal has been controvers­ial for a number of reasons, including allegation­s that processes were deliberate­ly manipulate­d to invest in the company that business person Iqbal Survé indirectly controls.

The PIC bought a 29% stake at R43 a share, implying a valuation of R14.8bn. But a few months before, financial statements showed that Ayo had total assets of R292m and a book value of R67m. Since then, the share has traded at far below the original valuation, and the transactio­n has emerged as one of the most contentiou­s being examined at the inquiry into the PIC.

Ayo has consistent­ly denied that there was any wrongdoing in the transactio­n.

Abel Sithole, GEPF principal executive officer since April 2015, told the inquiry on Monday the PIC “did not involve nor inform the GEPF when it considered and made the investment in Ayo. It did not highlight this investment in its subsequent reporting to the GEPF.”

Sithole was appearing before the commission being chaired by retired judge Lex Mpati. The GEPF is by far the largest client of the PIC, with assets of more than R1.8-trillion. The PIC manages almost all GEPF funds.

Sithole said the investment in Ayo had been a bone of contention between the PIC and its largest client.

“The PIC in its subsequent reporting to the GEPF contended that they considered that the Ayo investment fell under the ‘listed’ investment mandate.”

By Sithole’s interpreta­tion, this was contrary to what had been agreed before between the two organisati­ons. He referred to a letter the GEPF sent to the PIC in October 2017, just two months before the Ayo investment, which asked the PIC to engage the GEPF on any unlisted investment above R2bn.

The point was not that the GEPF must give approval, but rather that it can “interrogat­e” the investment­s, said Sithole. It did not prevent the PIC from investing amounts above that limit, he said.

In the context of the Ayo transactio­n, Sithole believed Ayo should have been categorise­d as an unlisted investment.

“It is my respectful submission that if, on the effective date and during the interim period before listing, the funding arrangemen­ts are legally classified as unlisted or accounted for as such, it is not clear why the funding arrangemen­t would be considered to be listed,” he said.

Sithole also took umbrage at the manner in which the PIC declared the investment to the GEPF, despite numerous requests inquiring as to what had transpired in relation to Ayo, as well as in relation to the investment mooted for Sagarmatha Technologi­es, a company related to Ayo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa