Business Day

Investor relations rain or shine

• Institutio­ns and analysts rate Absa, Nedbank and Growthpoin­t as top business communicat­ors

- STUART THEOBALD

The investor relations function in listed companies is critical in a crisis. When everything is going right and share prices are appreciati­ng, investors are happy. But when it goes wrong and they demand answers, an investor relations team has to be ready to deliver.

Intellidex released the results of the second annual investor relations awards on Friday. It is based on a survey of 130 institutio­nal investors and profession­al analysts regarding their experience of the investor relations of JSE-listed businesses. The research identifies companies that excel and those that investors say need to improve. The headlines were that Absa, Nedbank and Growthpoin­t ranked top in the overall awards (in that order). But there were interestin­g findings in other parts of the survey too.

One that stood out was Transactio­n Capital, which for a second year ranked first for “most accessible senior management”. As the survey research was undertaken from November to February 7, Transactio­n Capital’s recent earnings disappoint­ment, which led to a sharp fall in the share price, occurred after the study period. The obvious question is to what extent its reputation among shareholde­rs for accessible management helped soften the market reaction to bad news.

Speaking at the awards event on Friday, Transactio­n Capital investor relations head Nomonde Xulu said her team worked flat out to respond to every inquiry received. She said that due to the company’s reputation, there was a level of trust that was important in communicat­ing with the market, which while disappoint­ed could at least access the informatio­n needed to make sense of performanc­e.

As one respondent in the survey commented, “The good [investor relations] teams will be available specifical­ly around bad news to try to dissect it for investors. Horrible IRs or teams that have a lot to worry about will just bury their heads in the sand.”

Large-caps tend to dominate the airwaves and get the most investor attention, so the investor relations function at small and midcaps must work to build investor interest.

The small-caps rankings were led by former heavyweigh­t Murray and & Roberts, which has faced intense pressure amid a constructi­on industry slump. Also in the top three were gas developer Renergen and Dipula Income Fund, a real estate investment trust (Reit). For these companies, standing out among much larger peers is an achievemen­t on its own.

Among midcaps, resources company Afrimat, Vukile Property Fund and Transactio­n Capital took top honours. Afrimat was also notable for beating the much larger mining majors to rank top in that sector.

The companies that investors thought needed to improve include Capitec, DisChem, Coronation Fund Managers and Fortress Reit. Capitec also surprised the market with weaker-thanexpect­ed earnings announced

shortly before the research period.

One analyst commented, “Historical­ly, Capitec hasn’t had a particular­ly well-establishe­d IR function and as long as they were beating market expectatio­ns that wasn’t a huge problem. But their results for the six months to August 31 2022 missed market consensus, yet they believed that they hadn’t underdeliv­ered.

“The market took a bit of umbrage to that, and indicated that it was incumbent on Capitec to become a bit more institutio­nalised and provide more informatio­n. That I think was the genesis of the problem.”

Capitec has historical­ly had senior executives in finance and treasury functions engage directly with investors, but when the market felt it was getting bad news it wanted a dedicated investor relations

function. Other companies mentioned had all had some level of bruising encounter with shareholde­rs, whether it was about remunerati­on policies or, in the case of Fortress, losing its Reit status.

Almost all respondent­s said investor relations was important or very important when assessing potential investment­s. Max Gebhardt, MD of FTI Consulting, which sponsored the awards event, says the role of investor relations practition­ers is becoming increasing­ly complex as they have to explain company policies across a variety of measurable­s that investors are demanding. “Both investors and legislator­s are demanding more insight and informatio­n from C-suites every year. IR is there to facilitate this,” he says.

By shining a spotlight on the

investor relations sector and the increased transparen­cy it brings, this survey will help practition­ers fulfil the important role they play in enabling investors to make informed decisions.

Category winners

Consumer companies: Mr Price

Industrial­s: Growthpoin­t

Property Resources: Afrimat

Large-caps: Absa

Mid-caps: Transactio­n Capital

Small-caps: Murray & Roberts

Most accessible senior management: Transactio­n Capital

Best integrated annual report: Nedbank

Best market communicat­ions: Nedbank

Best disclosure of ESG metrics: Anglo American Platinum ● More detail is available on the

Intellidex website.

AMONG MIDCAPS, RESOURCES COMPANY AFRIMAT, VUKILE PROPERTY FUND AND TRANSACTIO­N CAPITAL TOOK TOP HONOURS

Theobald is chair of Intellidex.

 ?? ?? Critical factor: Almost all respondent­s said investor relations was important or particular­ly important when assessing potential investment­s. / 123RF
Critical factor: Almost all respondent­s said investor relations was important or particular­ly important when assessing potential investment­s. / 123RF
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