Cape Times

Vukile Property Fund agrees to R37m capital investment in Edcon stores

- DINEO FAKU dineo.faku@inl.co.za

VUKILE Property Fund yesterday agreed to a R37 million capital investment in Edcon, South Africa’s largest retailer in exchange for equity.

Vukile’s investment comes days after Edcon survived a collapse following an R2.7 billion recapitali­sation deal that is expected to save at least 140 000 direct and indirect jobs.

Edcon said on Friday that it had completed a recapitali­sation deal with its existing lenders, landlords and the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC), which included new cash commitment­s and rent reductions.

The recapitali­sation was expected to result in the removal of all of Edcon’s interest-bearing debt and introduced a new group structure and set of shareholde­rs. Property giants Redefine, Attacq and Hyprop have said they would support the recapitali­sation, while Investec Property Fund said it would also participat­e.

Vukile, whose footprint includes South Africa, Spain and the UK, said yesterday that the capital would be provided in four equal amounts at six-monthly intervals over two years starting in December 2019.

The company said Edcon represente­d 2.5 percent of Vukile’s group rental income, down from 3.2 percent last March 2018.

Vukile chief executive Laurence Rapp said the investment upheld the company’s underlying rental streams for Vukile shareholde­rs while mitigating risk. “Considerin­g what is at stake, with potential large-scale job losses in the retail and textile sectors as well as the implicatio­ns for the broader South African economy, we chose to be proactive in our negotiatio­ns with Edcon and play a constructi­ve part in its restructur­ing,” Rapp said.

Rapp also said that Edcon’s footprint in Vukile’s shopping centres would decline further and negotiatio­ns to achieve this were at an advanced stage.

Vukile expected the company’s exposure to Edcon to account for only 2 percent of Vukile’s group rental income by August 1. “The impact of the decreased exposure has been factored into the overall capital investment amount,” Rapp said.

Edcon stores in Vukile’s portfolio would be reduced by 11 to 43 stores by August 1, 2019, and the total Edcon footprint in Vukile’s portfolio would decline from 56 656m² to 40 086m².

Vukile has re-let or is in advance stages of negotiatio­ns to let around three-quarters of this 16 570m².

Meanwhile, Attacq said yesterday that its effective South African Edcon exposure will settle at 22 945m² by October 1, 2019, with effective gross monthly rental at R3.2 million.

Attacq warned its involvemen­t in Edcon’s recapitali­sation programme would negatively impact its 2019 financial year distributa­ble earnings by R4.1m.

Hyprop has said that it had agreed to support the restructur­ing proposal with a reduction in rentals, compensate­d for by equity participat­ion in Edcon.

“While this will impact distributa­ble earnings in the 2019 and 2020 financial years by 0.8 percent and 2.3 percent, respective­ly, it is considered an acceptable limitation of the risk,” it said on Friday.

 ?? SIPHIWE SIBEKO Reuters ?? SHOPPERS walk past an Edgars store at a shopping centre in Soweto, Johannesbu­rg. Vukile is set to invest R37 million in Edcon. |
SIPHIWE SIBEKO Reuters SHOPPERS walk past an Edgars store at a shopping centre in Soweto, Johannesbu­rg. Vukile is set to invest R37 million in Edcon. |

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