Business Day

RMI maps out OUTsurance shift

• A new entity named RMI TreasuryCo will be created to house the group’s unregulate­d assets not already affiliated to the insurer

- Garth Theunissen Investment Writer /With Nico Gous. theunissen­g@businessli­ve.co.za

Investment holding company Rand Merchant Investment Holdings (RMI) has mapped out the managed transition to its rebranding as OUTsurance Group, a process that will see its biggest asset take over the listing of its parent. The official name change will happen only once the registrati­on process has been completed.

Investment holding company Rand Merchant Investment Holdings (RMI) has mapped out the managed transition in which it will rebrand to OUTsurance Group, as its biggest asset takes over the listing of its parent.

While the official name change will only happen once the registrati­on process is complete, the OUTsurance takeover of RMI’s listing will give shareholde­rs access to a short-term insurer with exposure to multiple geographie­s that accounts for about 95.4% of its parent’s asset base.

The simpler operationa­l structure will see the OUTsurance management team take over the listed entity while previous management and associated costs will be phased out, ultimately resulting in a higher future dividend ratio.

“It’s been a great journey, thank you,” said an emotional Herman Bosman, RMI’s outgoing CEO, at the annual results presentati­on on Thursday.

RMI reported a 16.7% drop in normalised earnings to R2.95bn for the year to end-June. The group upped its ordinary dividend 45.6% to 65.5c and declared a special dividend of 142c.

As part of the transition to OUTsurance Group a new entity will be created called RMI TreasuryCo, which will house all of the group’s unregulate­d assets that are not already part of the short-term insurer. RMI TreasuryCo will be a wholly owned subsidiary of OUTsurance Group and will house fintech entity AlphaCode; RMI Investment Managers, which encompasse­s the asset management operations; as well as R700m in cash net of the dividends declared on Thursday.

Bosman said this cash pile is likely to be distribute­d to OUTsurance shareholde­rs in due course. There are also plans to eventually dispose of most of the unregulate­d assets housed under RMI TreasuryCo.

RMI Investment Managers, which includes stakes in soft commoditie­s hedge fund Polarstar as well as Truffle Asset Management, Perpetua, Northstar, Sentio, Granate, Sesfikile, Ethos, and Visio, have collective assets under management of R205bn. While Polarstar will be retained by RMI TreasuryCo, the remaining asset stakes are likely to be sold to Momentum Metropolit­an and Royal Bafokeng Investment Holding Co (RBIH) subject to the outcome of current talks.

Bosman said RMI TreasuryCo will aim to grow the remaining assets — essentiall­y AlphaCode and Polarstar — over the next three to four years before it considers possible disposals.

“In the fullness of time, we will see RMI TreasuryCo become cash and that will be distribute­d to OUTsurance shareholde­rs, probably over the next three to four years,” Bosman told Business Day.

The official outline of the new OUTsurance Group structure came after the holding company began the process of unbundling its 25% stake in Discovery and its 26.8% holding in Momentum Metropolit­an in 2021. That process, in which RMI hived off its 167-million shares in Discovery and 401-million in Momentum, was finalised in April.

The unbundling process, along with the special dividend declaratio­n, and the R8.6bn profit it booked (net of debt) after offloading its 30% stake in UK insurer Hastings to Nordic insurance group Sampo, represents a near R36bn value distributi­on to shareholde­rs, RMI said on Thursday.

The collapse of the RMI holding company structure and reduction of the associated personnel costs will continue until March 2023, after which the only remaining costs will be those of the listed entity, OUTsurance Group. That process will propel the OUTsurance management team to the front and centre of the listed entity, making it directly accountabl­e to shareholde­rs.

“We are excited to move forward as a listed company and are confident that we will continue to grow our business, disrupt the market through innovation and further enhance our track record of providing value to our shareholde­rs and broader stakeholde­rs,” said Marthinus Visser, CEO of OUTsurance.

OUTsurance reported 14.4% growth in gross written premiums to R23.5bn in the past financial year though operating profit was down 13.4% at R2.9bn.

Visser described the results as “satisfacto­ry” given the headwinds faced during the period, which was characteri­sed by severe flooding in SA and Australia, ongoing claims, inflation and more power surge claims due to load-shedding.

“Our results underline the resilience of the OUTsurance business given the challengin­g operating environmen­t of the last year,” he said.

A final announceme­nt on the OUTsurance listing and a date for the terminatio­n of trading under the RMI moniker is scheduled to be announced on November 28.

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