The Star Late Edition

Group Five is in need of R3.6bn just to survive business rescue

- EDWARD WEST edward.west@inl.co.za

GROUP Five needs R3.6 billion to fund its working capital requiremen­ts this year if it is to survive in an industry that is still on its knees.

Formerly one of South Africa’s biggest constructi­on groups, Group Five went into business rescue last week after a long-standing cash flow crisis, and it provided further details of its financial difficulti­es in a statement to stakeholde­rs on Friday.

It is the latest casualty of an ailing sector. “The South African constructi­on industry has been in trouble for some time – in September 2017 confidence in the industry was at its lowest level since the third quarter in 2000,” Momentum Securities portfolio manager Serfaas Badenhorst commented.

Business rescue proceeds were initiated because constructi­on industry conditions were worsening, a $106.5 million (R1.53 billion) contract guarantee became payable in November, while R350m of additional loan finance was unable to be secured.

Notwithsta­nding these factors, the board believes “there is a reasonable prospect of rescuing the company…” a statement said. The R3.6bn was estimated to be enough to fund working capital requiremen­ts until December 2019 and included R230m to pay severance packages to an as-yet-undetermin­ed number of employees, and the money required to make debt payments to lenders that had provided a R650m loan last April.

Operating subsidiary G5 Constructi­on was estimated to have a cash flow shortfall of R2.39bn for 2019, this after suffering negative cash flows from operating activities of some R800m in 2018.

“Certain of G5 Constructi­on’s projects were under-priced, which resulted in these projects being loss-making,” the directors said.

Some of the options the business rescue practition­ers could consider to rescue the group included a temporary moratorium on credit payments, negotiatin­g the sale of assets at prices better than a liquidatio­n sale, a restructur­ing of debt and further engagement with stakeholde­rs to retain the value in the group and its assets, the directors said.

Badenhorst said the biggest reasons for the problems in the industry were sluggish economic growth, uncertaint­y in government policy, an underperfo­rming rand and a lack of infrastruc­ture spending.

Another big listed constructi­on group in financial difficulty is Esor Constructi­on, which went into business rescue last year with R597m of liabilitie­s. Its creditors this month voted to accept the business rescue plan, a statement said on Friday. Some analysts are predicting slightly better conditions in the sector this year.

Dr Roelof Botha, an economist who compiles the Africat Constructi­on Index, said last week that the generally low levels of activity in the sector might improve in the second half of 2019, especially as a result of the new approach towards economic policy, as characteri­sed in the early stages of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s tenure.

But Badenhorst warned it would be a “long road to recovery” for many cash-strapped constructi­on companies.

The Master Builders Associatio­n North, with members in Gauteng, North West, Mpumalanga and Limpopo, said the government’s lack of progress on the National Developmen­t Plan was “killing off the constructi­on sector”. Several consecutiv­e quarters of slow and even negative growth in the sector had created a “state of emergency’’ for large and small constructi­on firms alike, said Musa Shangase, president of the associatio­n.

He said Group Five’s business rescue proceeding­s had followed hard on the heels of a disappoint­ing national Budget speech, which had offered little hope of significan­t infrastruc­ture investment in the foreseeabl­e future.

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