Daily Dispatch

Moloko has a bit ‘too much on his plate’

- MUDIWA GAVAZA and TIISETSO MOTSOENENG His departure would punch a leadership hole in the board of Telkom, which became the centre of attraction in recent months when MTN pitched an all-share takeover deal, only to pull out after Rain waded into the battl

Sello Moloko, one of SA’S bestknown business leaders with over three decades in the financial services industry, has been urged by the Prudential Authority to step down as chair of Telkom and focus his attention on Absa.

Moloko, who took over from Wendy Lucas-bull to lead a nine-person Absa board at the beginning of April, also heads the board of Telkom, a role he has occupied since 2019 to replace the late Jabu Mabuza.

His departure would punch a leadership hole in the board of Telkom, which became the centre of attraction in recent months when MTN pitched an all-share takeover deal, only to pull out after Rain waded into the battle for SA’S second-largest mobile phone operator.

For Telkom shareholde­rs, which include the custodian of more than R2.5-trillion in government employee pensions, the Public Investment Corporatio­n, if Moloko quits it would mean the board is one person short to guide and oversee the management led by Serame Taukobong to release billions of rand trapped in the company’s sprawling infrastruc­ture.

Both 40% state-owned Telkom and the Prudential Authority, the bank supervisio­n unit led by Reserve Bank deputy governor Fundi Tshazibana, declined to comment.

For the Prudential Authority, Moloko’s exit would free him up to devote his energies to one of the nationally systemic banks at a time when the industry is looking for new income streams to fend off competitio­n from nimbler app-only banks.

Two sources said Telkom has considered Mteto Nyati, former CEO of Altron and MTN’S SA division who joined the Telkom board in July, to replace Moloko. Nyati is now executive chair of boutique technology consulting outfit BSG after getting a 40% stake.

Moloko, a Soweto-born mathematic­s graduate, is among the most respected business leaders in the country with a career spanning close to 30 years in the financial services industry. He is a former CEO of Old Mutual Asset Managers.

He has guided the boards of companies such as mining house Sibanye-stillwater, pension funds administra­tor Alexforbes and General Reinsuranc­e Africa Limited, a division of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway. He has also served on the boards of Prudential Investment Managers, DG Capital and Stor-age Reit.

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