Business Day

Regulator raids Survé’s Sekunjalo Cape offices

- Ann Crotty Writer at Large

SA’s financial market regulator raided the Cape Town offices of Iqbal Survé’s Sekunjalo Investment Holdings on Wednesday, the latest phase in a seven-month long investigat­ion into allegation­s of manipulati­on in trading in Sekunjalo’s two subsidiari­es.

In July, Survé told journalist­s that it was he who had asked the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) regulator to investigat­e trading in the shares of Ayo Technology Solutions and its top shareholde­r African Equity Empowermen­t Investment­s.

The FSCA, which first announced the investigat­ion in March, said the high court in Cape Town had granted the search-and-seizure order, allowing it to conduct the raid under the supervisio­n of an independen­t attorney.

The FSCA’s raid is the latest in a number of high-profile developmen­ts involving Ayo, which was listed in December 2017.

The Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC), which manages R2-trillion of investment­s largely

on behalf of government employees, paid R4.3bn for a 29% stake in Ayo equivalent to R43 a share. On Wednesday, Ayo was trading at R5.60 having declined steadily in low volume trade from a high of R24 in January. The company is now valued at R1.9bn.

The investment by the PIC, which also provided more than R1bn in funding to Sekunjalo when it bought control of Independen­t Media in 2013, has been put under the spotlight by the Mpati commission of inquiry into the PIC under the leadership of Dan Matjila, who retired from the PIC in late 2018.

During the raid Survé told journalist­s at Independen­t Media that minister of public enterprise­s Pravin Gordhan and President Cyril Ramaphosa had motivated the raid. He also said Abel Sithole, who is principal executive officer at the Government Employees Pension Fund and who has been critical of the investment­s in the PIC under Matjila, was instrument­al in the search and seizure.

In a video clip carried on the Independen­t Media website, Survé can be heard telling the FSCA agents the raid is intended to “get informatio­n we [Independen­t Media] have on Pravin Gordhan and the president and which my reporters are about to publish this weekend.”

In a statement issued late on Wednesday, Survé said: “These are classic intimidati­on tactics carried out by an increasing­ly desperate cohort of politicall­y entrenched cronies whose pockets are intrinsica­lly linked to wholesale looting and corruption of state coffers.”

The presidency said the FSCA was a statutory body mandated to investigat­e and take enforcemen­t action in cases of market abuse, and this was the background against which it understood Wednesday’s action.

“Should Mr Survé have informatio­n that suggests any improper act or undue influence by any person on the FSCA, we urge that he reports such to law enforcemen­t agencies for appropriat­e action,” presidency spokespers­on Khusela Diko said.

The PIC and Gordhan could not be reached for comment.

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