Business Day

ZAR X exchange licence suspended

- Garth Theunissen Investment Writer theunissen­g@businessli­ve.co.za

The Financial Sector Conduct Authority has suspended the exchange licence of ZAR X, the alternativ­e trading platform that is partly owned by the Public Investment Corporatio­n. The suspension is due to ZAR X’s non-compliance with a section of the Financial Markets Act related to liquidity and capital-adequacy requiremen­ts.

The Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) has suspended the exchange licence of ZAR X, the alternativ­e trading platform owned partly by the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC).

The suspension took effect at 4pm on Friday and is due to ZAR X’s noncomplia­nce with the Financial Markets Act section on liquidity and capital-adequacy requiremen­ts of an exchange, the FSCA said in an e-mail on Monday. The suspension was put in place with the agreement of the SA Reserve Bank and the Prudential Authority (PA).

This includes conditions, requiring ZAR X to immediatel­y inform all affected parties, including entities listed on the exchange and all authorised users and investors. ZAR X must inform any appointed central securities depositori­es (CSDs), organisati­ons that facilitate the easy transfer of ownership of listed securities. ZAR X must give the FSCA weekly progress reports on how it is dealing with its suspension notice.

“We don’t take this regulatory action lightly, given its impact,” said FSCA commission­er Unathi Kamlana. “Our view, however, is that this is a necessary step to safeguard market integrity and the interest of issuers and the broader investing public. This is the cornerston­e of our mandate as the FSCA.”

ZAR X, which began operating in February 2017, is the longest-running of the crop of alternativ­e exchanges that sprang up in recent years to challenge JSE dominance. While other alternativ­e exchanges, which include 4 Africa Exchange (4AX) and A2X Markets, have attracted secondary listings from JSE-listed firms, as well as exchange-traded instrument­s, they have yet to seriously change the way publicly traded companies and other securities raise capital in SA.

ZAR X co-founder and CEO Etienne Nel said in a statement on Monday that it had lodged an appeal against its suspension but would continue working with the FSCA and other regulatory authoritie­s to resolve the issue.

“Whilst the timing of the suspension is unfortunat­e, we consider it to be temporary and poses no risk to issuers or investors who hold their assets in their own name directly at Strate,” said Nel, in reference to SA’s main central securities depository and collateral platform.

Nel said that ZAR X concluded “a significan­t equity transactio­n” with a foreign investor in December 2020 that had wanted to acquire a controllin­g interest in the exchange. However, he said the PIC, ZAR X’s biggest shareholde­r, had failed to approve the transactio­n.

“The transactio­n has since stalled due to an inability by our largest shareholde­r, the PIC, to grant formal approval of the transactio­n due to protracted internal issues and governance processes,” said Nel. “ZAR X is at an advanced stage of negotiatio­n with a number of other prospectiv­e investors.”

The PIC, which invests for the Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF), acquired a 25% stake in ZAR X in January 2018. Nel told Business Day then that the PIC investment would bolster the exchange’s balance sheet and BEE credential­s.

Nel said ZAR X has a significan­t pipeline of listings that have been delayed due to Covid-19, but that would come to fruition once it had concluded a transactio­n with a prospectiv­e investor. According to ZAR X’s website, it has attracted seven listings since it began operating in early 2017.

Despite the suspension, ZAR X will be allowed to continue operating as an exchange to give effect to transactio­ns in progress or otherwise not finalised at the date of suspension. But it is not permitted to allow any further trading beyond suspension date or to accept any new listings.

ZAR X’s suspension remain in effect until it either rectifies its noncomplia­nce with capital adequacy requiremen­ts to the satisfacti­on of authoritie­s or until the FSCA takes a final decision on the cancellati­on of its exchange licence.

The FSCA said it intended to proceed with the cancellati­on of ZAR X’s exchange licence three months after the date of suspension, should it fail to rectify its noncomplia­nce with the necessary capital adequacy requiremen­ts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa