Daily Maverick

Tongaat Hulett investors faced with sticky situation

The takeover of the sugar producer by Zim’s Rudland family is on the cards.

- By Tim Cohen

The South African investment community is on the horns of a dilemma regarding the underwritt­en rights offer for Tongaat Hulett – either do a deal with one of Zimbabwe’s most notorious families or face the break-up of southern Africa’s leading sugar producer.

Tongaat Hulett has been through the wringer over the past few years after the discovery of accounting irregulari­ties in 2019, which resulted in the company having to restate its results and being fined by the JSE.

The result was an implosion in the company’s share price which, in 2018, was trading at around R130 compared with the roughly R6 at which it is trading today. Despite a clean-up campaign, an extensive investigat­ion by PwC and a new management sweep, the company is still struggling.

The share price implosion has pushed the company’s balance sheet to the verge of being unsustaina­ble, and its huge debt load of roughly R6.6-billion is now at risk, causing a minor panic among its bankers.

Into this morass has jumped a Mauritius-registered company, Magister, which is owned and controlled by members of Zimbabwe’s Rudland family, who have reportedly been consistent supporters of Zanu-PF and its leadership.

The family also owns the Gold Leaf Tobacco Corporatio­n, which, by some estimates, is the largest cigarette company in South Africa measured by the number of cigarettes sold. The company burst into the public spotlight when co-owner Simon Rudland survived a gangland-style assassinat­ion attempt in August 2019.

There is no direct link between Magister and Gold Leaf, which is represente­d by Simon Rudland’s brother, Hamish, whose main business is in the transport industry.

However, several reports have warned about Zimbabwe’s recent descent into “a Russian-style oligarchic­al system”.

“It’s becoming a regional hub for laundering illicit wealth that is fuelling violent conflict,” one report concludes.

It also included a detailed breakdown of the alleged activities of the Rudland family, including gold smuggling, money laundering and mining in conservati­on areas.

Magister announced on 17 November 2021 that it would underwrite the first R2-billion of a R4-billion rights offer. If successful, the rights offer will go a long way towards solving Tongaat’s debt problem and will probably maintain the integrity of the company.

The drama of the rights offer is illustrate­d by the fact that Tongaat currently has an equity value of R770-million. The rights offer therefore has the likely outcome that it will completely transform the ownership structure of the company.

In terms of the deal, Magister’s shareholdi­ng is capped at a maximum of 60% of the enlarged shareholdi­ng. Magister will receive a board seat for every 20% of the company that it owns, post the rights issue. It will also receive a fixed underwriti­ng fee of 1.5%, or R30-million.

Tongaat itself has few other options besides selling its assets piecemeal, a process it had already begun, principall­y by selling its very profitable starch operations and a number of smaller businesses, including the Namibian trading and marketing business and operations in Swaziland.

At an operating level, the company is still struggling. In a trading statement in September, it announced that headline earnings for the six months to 20 September would be sharply down. And so it turned out when the company announced its interim results on 9 December, with operating profit down from R1.67-billion to R1.2-billion.

For South African investors, the proposal is complex: do a deal with a “notorious” family or face the break-up of the company, putting at risk the future of the 29,000 employees at peak harvest season in operations across South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Botswana.

For its part, Tongaat has thrown in its lot with the former option. Asked in the context of the Zondo Commission report, which slated SA business for turning a blind eye to corruption, whether a deal with Magister is advisable, the company said it considers that Magister “would be a suitable investor”.

Head of communicat­ions for Tongaat Virginia Horsley said, as part of the company’s assessment of Magister, PwC, at Tongaat’s request, conducted an independen­t compliance due diligence exercise, which included gaining an understand­ing of Magister, its assets and investment­s and its associates, as well as a review of a combinatio­n of publicly available informatio­n, selected private corporate informatio­n, references and responses from Magister to specific questions.

“Magister is invested in several reputable and substantia­l businesses, and Tongaat believes that it would be a suitable investor.

“Magister has provided Tongaat with a South African bank guarantee to support its underwriti­ng commitment­s. As part of this process, Standard Bank undertook Anti-Money Laundering and Know Your Customer checks, which Tongaat has taken comfort from.

“We believe that through a rights offer of up to R4-billion, Tongaat will unlock longterm growth, protect intrinsic shareholde­r value and create a legacy for the many people dependent on the Tongaat business across the SADC.”

For their part, the Rudland family is adamant that the “notorious” tag is inappropri­ate. In reply to questions from Business Maverick, the company said: “Rudland family members have many business interests in reputable and substantia­l businesses, including listed companies.

“There is no basis to suggest that they are unsuitable to invest in Tongaat. The family has high regard for good corporate governance practices. Magister has confidence in the management of Tongaat and has no intention of being involved in the day-to-day operations of Tongaat.”

Family members already own 9.98% of Tongaat through a United Arab Emirates-registered company, Braemar. But neither Braemar nor Magister will be voting on the resolution­s for corporate governance reasons, even though they are not technicall­y “related parties”, as defined by the Companies Act or JSE rules. Other investors are not so sure: they range from reluctantl­y supportive to outright astounded that Magister could conceivabl­y pass any reputable Know Your Customer check. Representa­tives of the major cigarette producers affiliated with the Tobacco Institute of Southern Africa claim that the newcomers, affiliated with the Fair Trade Independen­t Tobacco Associatio­n (Fita), have been selling enormous quantities of cigarettes very cheaply by the simple mechanism of not paying SA’s huge cigarette excise tax. Fita members deny the claim.

The pandemic, particular­ly the banning of tobacco sales for a period in 2020, was a huge boon to Fita members, which had been operating mostly under the radar anyway, often selling “cheapie” cigarettes individual­ly rather than by the packet.

Magister says Gold Leaf has not financed Magister and is not financing the underwrite or any part of it.

The two biggest shareholde­rs in Tongaat are the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC), which did not respond to media enquiries, and financial group PSG, which own 14% and 15% of the company, respective­ly.

Both PSG and the PIC have supported the process of putting the notion of the rights offer to shareholde­rs but have not yet agreed to support the bid, which will depend on the pricing of the offer.

The chief executive of PSG Asset Management, Anet Ahern, said “juggling all the stakeholde­rs’ interests is exceptiona­lly tricky in this case, as Tongaat also has a big impact on the society in which it operates. Tough choices need to be made, and these will always be controvers­ial.”

In effect, the bankers of the deal, Standard Bank, have sought to place the responsibi­lity for the decision to proceed with the board and shareholde­rs of Tongaat.

“Standard Bank complies with local and internatio­nal anti-money laundering legislatio­n and takes this responsibi­lity seriously. Standard Bank follows its internal client risk assessment processes diligently and consistent­ly, and will not put its reputation at risk by doing business in an unethical, illegal or unprofessi­onal manner.

“Any decision to proceed with the rights offer and any related transactio­ns will be the sole and independen­t responsibi­lity of the Tongaat Hulett board and its shareholde­rs,” it said.

Tongaat Hulett has been through the wringer over the past few years after the discovery

of accounting irregulari­ties in 2019

 ?? Photo: Aaron Ufumeli/EPA-EFE ?? Workers at Tongaat Hulett in Triangle, south of Harare, Zimbabwe.
Photo: Aaron Ufumeli/EPA-EFE Workers at Tongaat Hulett in Triangle, south of Harare, Zimbabwe.

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