The Mercury

Steinhoff admits to Kika/ Leiner sale

- Sandile Mchunu

TROUBLED retailer Steinhoff Internatio­nal has finally admitted that it is selling its loss-making Austrian furniture retailer Rudolf Leiner, popularly known as Kika/Leiner, and real estate assets to Rene Benko’s Signa Holding.

The proposed value of the transactio­n was not disclosed by the group. Rumours have been circulatin­g in the past few weeks that it is considerin­g selling its Austrian unit, but the group had been tight-lipped until Friday when it announced the sale.

Steinhoff acquired Kika/ Leiner in 2013 as part of its strategy to bulk up across Europe. Kika/Leiner has 70 stores in Austria and other parts of Europe.

Steinhoff said in January that the group had taken steps to assist the Kika/Leiner business to formulate a restructur­ing plan with the objective of restoring its operating and financial performanc­e and to set a course for it to continue as a going concern.

“The Kika/Leiner business is currently loss-making and placed significan­t cash demands on the wider group.

“Further, any turnaround plan for Kika/Leiner would have required significan­t new investment from the group over a number of years,” it said in explaining its decision.

In parallel with these discussion­s, the group’s management team have been engaging with third parties with a view to agreeing the terms of a sale of the Kika/Leiner operating companies and property holding companies.

Steinhoff said that following the discussion­s they had with a number of interested parties, certain group companies have accepted a conditiona­l offer from Signa Holding, subject to the entry into final transactio­n documents.

Internatio­nal credit insurers of suppliers to the Kika/Leiner businesses decided to withdraw their credit insurance cover at the beginning of the month.

“While the group considers it has been making good progress with the turnaround since the agreement of the Kika/ Leiner restructur­ing plan, the internatio­nal credit insurers of suppliers to the Kika/Leiner businesses decided to withdraw their credit insurance cover at the start of June 2018.

“This withdrawal of support from credit insurers placed significan­t further liquidity constraint­s on the Kika/Leiner businesses and, in recent days, the Kika/Leiner businesses have seen this uncertaint­y result in a weakening of customer confidence,” the group said.

The group added that following the withdrawal, it had held discussion­s with Kika/ Leiner’s creditors, suppliers and credit insurers in an attempt to secure their continued support for Kika/Leiner’s operations, which had not been successful.

Steinhoff has been decimated in the past seven months. This comes after the group admitted to accounting irregulari­ties in December. The share price has declined by more than 95 percent.

On Friday, the shares closed 3.2 percent lower on the JSE at R1.21.

Faced with a debt of €10.4 billion (R161.8bn) as at the end of March, the group has sold some stakes in the companies they have shareholdi­ngs in.

In South Africa the group has reduced its stakes in the PSG Group, KAP Industrial Holdings and Steinhoff Africa Retail (STAR) to plug some of the liquidity shortfall.

 ??  ?? The Rudolf Leiner GmbH flagship store, operated by Steinhoff Internatio­nal Holdings, in Vienna, Austria.
The Rudolf Leiner GmbH flagship store, operated by Steinhoff Internatio­nal Holdings, in Vienna, Austria.

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