Cape Times

Ripple effects: Zim companies withdraw dividends, halt advances to suppliers

- TAWANDA KAROMBO

COMPANIES in Zimbabwe have started to withdraw declared dividend payouts and halting advance payments to suppliers as the fallout from President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s directive that banks stop lending ripples across the economy.

Amid much criticism, the government of Zimbabwe is pressing ahead with its temporary suspension of lending services by banks.

The Financial Intelligen­ce Unit (FIU) further tightened the noose on banks, asking banks to “disclose suspense and other internal accounts” in a directive dated May 11.

“Some banks may be using suspense and other internal accounts for purposes of purchasing foreign currency on the parallel market.

“Every bank is required to furnish to the FIU a list of all the suspense and other internal accounts,” Oliver Chiperesa, a director general of the Zimbabwean FIU wrote in the letter.

The effects of the new monetary measures have been rippling beyond the banking sector.

Listed companies that had already declared a dividend have started to scrap the payout for the dividends, citing the need to preserve cash in the aftermath of a possible credit crunch arising out of the government’s directives.

“The changes in the financial operating environmen­t and resultant uncertaint­y have significan­tly disrupted the credit markets.

“This caused the company to revise the announced dividend position supported with the need to preserve working capital for the company,” ZSE-listed diversifie­d consumable­s manufactur­er, Dairibord Holdings, said yesterday.

A unit of Edgars Zimbabwe has also suspended credit advances while Surrey, a big livestock processor, has stopped farmers from bringing produce to its abattoirs.

Sugar processors Triangle and Hippo Valley – both controlled by Tongaat Hulett – are also stopping advance payments to cane growers.

“It is with regret that the millers advise of the immediate suspension of advance payments until further notice,” James Bowmaker, chief operating officer for Tongaat Hulett Zimbabwe, said in a letter to cane farmers, citing the suspension of lending by banks.

“Following the recent suspension of lending by banks, we find ourselves unable to continue offering advances. We normally fund the advances from loan proceeds that we access from the banks,” said Bowmaker.

Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor John Mangudya said the directive to suspend banks from lending was an interim mechanism to manage the worsening economic situation.

“This is not a long-term, it’s a short-term measure to deal with macroecono­mic stability. Money was flowing into the economy and we have closed the tap,” he said.

Local economist Brains Muchemwa said although there was an urgent “need to contain money supply growth by all means necessary, doing so by swinging a sharp sword at lightning speed on bank credit” is the worst manner of handling the situation.

He said banks and their customers were “not the primary source of the avalanche of liquidity in the market” as the central bank and central government balance sheets “have ballooned significan­tly” over the last three years.

The other new measures by Mnangagwa included a switch from the official weekly auction exchange rate that trailed the street rate by multiples to a willing-buyer-willing-seller interbank rate that retailers are now mandated to use.

This has given rise to a triple tier auction rate system and has sparked a fresh wave of price increases.

Even companies and individual­s importing into Zimbabwe now have to face a steep increase in the duty payable.

This is after the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority adjusted its working exchange rate for tax payments to the new inter-bank rate.

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