Cape Times

Growthpoin­t won’t give embattled Edcon a rental reprieve

- KABELO KHUMALO kabelo.khumalo@inl.co.za

SOUTH Africa’s largest listed property investment holding company Growthpoin­t Properties yesterday said it had refused to give the embattled Edcon rental reprieve in the retailer’s latest turnaround attempt.

Growthpoin­t said it was among the landlords approached in December 2018 to consider a rental reduction for retail space leased to Edcon’s brands.

However, the company said its business model, which was based on contractua­l leases that provide a steady stream of annuity income, made it difficult to agree to the request for a rental reduction.

Group chief executive Norbert Sasse said Growthpoin­t participat­ed in the restructur­ing of Edcon by providing it with an equity injection of R110 million in return for a stake.

“Growthpoin­t is participat­ing in the restructur­ing of Edcon, but this should have no material impact on rental income… Growthpoin­t has reduced its exposure to Edcon in recent years to 110 000m² in its retail portfolio,” Sasse said. “This should decrease by a further 18 000m² or more in the next two years.”

This month Edcon said that it had secured R2 billion in new cash and rent deductions as part of a recapitali­sation plan.

Growthpoin­t said it was pinning its domestic growth hopes on V&A Waterfront as it expected little growth from the rest of its local operations.

The group said it would continue to explore various alternativ­es to facilitate the portfolio asset sale of its South African properties.

It said the V&A Waterfront, which benefits from local and internatio­nal tourism, was positioned to deliver growth.

The V&A Waterfront is a 23-hectare mixed-use property developmen­t situated in and around the historic Victoria and Alfred Basins, in Cape Town.

Growthpoin­t said it disposed of twelve properties in the six months to end December R2.8bn.

It said it would rely on its offshore properties for growth, due to deteriorat­ing conditions in the local property sector.

The group has a 66 percent stake in Growthpoin­t Properties Australia, which owns 59 properties valued at R38.3bn.

Sasse said that there was a solid developmen­t pipeline in Romania and acquisitio­n opportunit­ies in Poland.

The group reported 5.9 percent growth in distributa­ble income to R3.1bn during the period.

It said its property assets increased 4.3 percent to R138.7bn, while office renewal success rate rose from 54.5 to 62.6 percent.

The company said that low economic growth, weak demand and oversupply in the office sector, together with property disposals, had resulted in more office space being vacant.

Vestact portfolio manager Michael Treherne said: “Growthpoin­t’s vacancy for office space grows to 10 percent (from 8.6 percent), and industrial vacancy grows to 5 percent (from 4 percent). Tells you where the South African economy is at the moment.”

Growthpoin­t rose 0. 94 percent on the JSE yesterday to close at R24.73.

 ?? MBOKAZI African News Agency (ANA) SIMPHIWE ?? GROWTHPOIN­T chief executive Norbert Sasse presents the company results at their offices in Sandton, Johannesbu­rg.
MBOKAZI African News Agency (ANA) SIMPHIWE GROWTHPOIN­T chief executive Norbert Sasse presents the company results at their offices in Sandton, Johannesbu­rg.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa