Wednesday, November 20, 2024
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Is South African merger control raining on private equity’s Dezemba?

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By all accounts, investor sentiment is trending positively. In principle, this should provide a shot in the arm for South African private equity (PE), which has been languishing somewhat.

There are compelling arguments for why a dynamic private equity sector is good for an economy. PE funds compete at two levels – for investors’ funds and for opportunities to invest in sectors with upside – and both of these imperatives drive investment innovation. Successful investors need to bring something extra to the table to ensure that portfolio companies grow quickly, to realise a demonstrable return and enhance the fund’s reputation in subsequent rounds, to secure funding and be the preferred bidder. As far back as 1890, English economist Alfred Marshall developed the notion of “knowledge spillover”, and recent studies of data across the OECD have revealed that when there is private equity intervention in an industry, there is an overall increase in employment, productivity, capex and profitability, as peers react to the competitive innovations introduced by PE and venture capital1.

In the USA, PE has developed a bad rap for loading investee companies with debt and then driving short-term operational improvements by effectively “looting” their investee companies – at the expense of workers and long-term sustainability.

Although South Africa has had the odd leveraged buyout scandal, for the most part, our approach to PE (particularly, home-grown funds) is decidedly less venal. It has to be: progressive labour laws, aggressive unions and merger control rules make retrenchments difficult, and so returns cannot be based on driving “synergies” as a euphemism for job-cuts. Our economy is not as vast as the US’s and cannot absorb the odd failing firm without contaminating whole industries. Just as a rising tide lifts all boats, they go down with the ebb, and PE funds in South Africa surely know that in an emerging market, overall growth is an imperative. PE firms here have become adept at fundamentally improving businesses, not hollowing them out. Amid current challenges, they provide access to capital where many businesses would otherwise struggle to find it. In the South African environment, PE is becoming well versed in matters such as ESG, supplier and enterprise development, and all manner of socio-economic imperatives that go with responsible investing in this country.

The sector also has tremendous potential for transformation. Although still under-indexed, black fund managers are becoming more prevalent, and many young, driven, black professionals and entrepreneurs see PE as an exciting space. But private money demands results, and like any PE, black-owned PE can succeed only where it develops a track record of enough successful investments coupled with successful exits to ensure repeat business from investors.

Finally, South African PE is also a valuable conduit for foreign investment and local pension funds (many funds have an offshore component and a local fund to cater for both sources).

So, if a strong PE sector contributes so significantly to the economy, should we not be doing all we can to foster and support PE firms as they endeavour to inject capital, innovation and growth into various industries? This brings into focus the policy decisions of a key gatekeeper for investment in South Africa: the competition authorities.

While no-one would deny the importance of merger regulation to avoid substantial anticompetitive outcomes or significant risks to the public interest, it would be regrettable if regulation operates to trammel activity that raises no such concerns. And yet the murmur from boardrooms in South Africa and abroad increasingly suggests that merger control is a major factor in deciding whether to invest or not.

While some big M&A transactions can price in the challenges and take a long-term view, PE is disproportionately hit by overzealous merger regulation, as a successful PE model involves making serial investments in circumstances where frictionless exits in relatively short order are as important as closing the investment in the first place.

In PE, trips to the Competition Commission are a regular headache, not a once-off ordeal. There are a number of factors that PE firms need to manage when devising an investment case:

• The Commission’s public interest guidelines for mergers emphasise that all mergers should result in increased levels of worker ownership, with the introduction of an employee share ownership plan (ESOP) a typical quid pro quo for approval. However, PE typically seeks to deploy growth capital and stimulate reinvestment in the business. This often eliminates dividend flow, which makes an ESOP ineffective.

• The Commission’s public interest policy also drives HDP ownership commitments. While this may aid black fund managers at the point of entry, it complicates exit as maintaining the same level limits the pool of potential buyers. The notion that a black fund manager’s stake is less liquid could affect the ability to seed the funds.

• Perversely, this reduces any incentive to introduce higher BEE ownership at or after the investment, as this will create a bigger issue to be solved for on exit, as a reduction in HDP ownership is considered to be contrary to the public interest.

• In practice, many firms are exploring ways to avoid triggering a merger, introducing complex structures or a need to avoid any controlling stake or minority investor protections that could give rise to control. This reduces the amount of capital that can be deployed, and also stunts the prospect of meaningful new strategies to grow and disrupt industries.

• The Commission’s approach to small mergers could chill PE and venture capital support for startups, as valuations that exceed large merger thresholds, even if the business is fledgling, attract merger scrutiny. While these measures were designed to police big tech “killer acquisitions”, the size of many private equity funds means they are also caught.

• Many of the most attractive industries for private equity investment (such as healthcare, renewables and other infrastructure and technology) are also focus sectors for the Commission, resulting in investigatory delays.

• A lack of understanding of fund structures and management means that larger funds face complicated filing disclosures to identify potential cross-shareholdings, even across separate funds, fueling unfounded information exchange concerns. This erodes the proposition that PE investment is less risky for competition than trade buyers.

There is hope that the competition authorities will begin to consider that its policy should not make PE investment in a difficult economic climate more difficult, as this leaves valuable growth and foreign investment money on the table. By the same token, investors need to be sanguine about the reality of the regulatory environment, which means factoring in merger control law and policy at an early stage of developing a deal strategy.

1 Aldatmaz and Brown Private equity in the global economy: Evidence on industry spillovers, Journal of Corporate Finance, Feb 2020, 10524)1

Chris Charter is a Director, Competition | Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr.

This article first appeared in Catalyst, DealMakers’ quarterly private equity publication.

PODCAST: MAGAnomics – Trump and the global economy

Listen to the podcast here:


What impact will Trump’s presidency have on the global economy and emerging markets? Tune in to the latest episode of the No Ordinary Wednesday podcast for insights from Investec experts, Annabel Bishop (SA) and Ellie Henderson (UK). 

Hosted by seasoned broadcaster, Jeremy Maggs, the No Ordinary Wednesday podcast unpacks the latest economic, business and political news in South Africa, with an all-star cast of investment and wealth managers, economists and financial planners from Investec. Listen in every second Wed

Hosted by seasoned broadcaster, Jeremy Maggs, the No Ordinary Wednesday podcast unpacks the latest economic, business and political news in South Africa, with an all-star cast of investment and wealth managers, economists and financial planners from Investec. Listen in every second Wednesday for an in-depth look at what’s moving markets, shaping the economy, and changing the game for your wallet and your business.


Also on Spotify and Apple Podcasts:

GHOST BITES (Brait | Dipula Income Fund | Emira | Ethos Capital | Southern Sun)

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Virgin Active has injected some energy into Brait (JSE: BAT)

Membership numbers and pricing are up at the gym group

Virgin Active represents 61% of Brait’s total assets. The other really important stake is Premier (JSE: PMR), which you can invest in directly on the JSE. Premier just released excellent numbers showing growth in HEPS of 34%, so that set the scene for Brait to hopefully come out with a decent story at Virgin Active.

Sure enough, memberships at Virgin Active grew 6% year-on-year and pricing was up 9%, so that’s 16% revenue growth excluding Kauai. Add in the growth at Kauai (my favourite takeaway option) and you’re at 23%. All territories grew solidly, with the UK the lowest at 11% and Singapore the highest at 34%.

With this kind of growth and a fixed cost base, the revenue drops to the bottom line beautifully. There’s been a more than fourfold increase in EBITDA!

As Brait has been valuing Virgin Active based on their estimate of maintainable EBITDA, there’s actually no valuation uptick here. The carrying value on the investment came down slightly if you can believe it, despite debt being reduced. It just shows how daft the valuation approach has been, which is why the market ignores the Brait net asset value per share and conducts its own valuations.

If you’re wondering about New Look, the fashion retailer in the UK that comprises 5% of Brait’s total assets, I’m afraid that it isn’t good news. Revenue fell 3.5% and EBITDA was down 22.7%. We’ve seen really mixed numbers out of UK fashion retailers recently, with Truworths doing well there and TFG struggling. New Look has always been a poor cousin to those businesses, so I’m not surprised to see the numbers down.

The share price closed 5.5% on the day. The chart this year looks like a pretty decent gradient profile on a spinning bike:


Property costs are hurting Dipula Income Fund (JSE: DIB)

Distributable earnings per share is down 4%

Dipula Income Fund holds a portfolio of property assets across various property types in South Africa. Even though they have really painful exposure like a government-tenanted office portfolio, they still achieved 7% growth in revenue for the year ended August 2024.

Alas, there was a 15% increase in property expenses, driven by issues like municipal tariff hikes and maintenance – you know, all the things that make property an unattractive asset class in many cases. Net property income therefore only increased 2%.

To make it worse, net finance costs were up 3%, so distributable earnings ended up decreasing by 4%. At least the net asset value per share increased by 5.2%, so there’s something to make shareholders feel better. Another small highlight is that the loan-to-value ratio has been quite stable, coming in at 35.48% vs. 35.18% the prior year.

Unsurprisingly, the best uptick in value is in the retail portfolio, up 8.3%. At the other end of the spectrum, we find the office portfolio down 2.0%.

The group pays out 90% of distributable earnings per share as a dividend. This puts the share price on a trailing dividend yield of almost exactly 10%.


A slight increase in the Emira dividend (JSE: EMI)

The office sector is still facing difficulties

Emira isn’t shy of doing deals and building an unusual portfolio. For example, they have the residential portfolio inside Transcend Residential Property Fund. They also have exposure to the US and Poland. Remember, complications are usually a negative rather than a positive, as time has shown us on the JSE.

The dividend for the six months to September has increased by just 1.1% to 62.39 cents. This is despite distributable income being 6.9% higher. Whilst you would immediately assume here that this must be due to more shares being in issue, that isn’t actually the case at Emira. The difference is due to the adjustment for the equity-accounted investments in the US, with a new approach of simply paying out 95% of distributable income rather than actual dividends received.

The loan-to-value ratio has improved from 42.4% to 42.0%. I would argue that this is still on the high side, although we are at least in a decreasing interest rate cycle now.

The net asset value (NAV) per share increased by 12.3% to R19.455. The share price is R11.01, so as usual the market cares much more about the dividend yield than the theoretical NAV.

I must also note that the office sector remains difficult. Emira holds a high quality portfolio and although vacancies continued to decline (down from 10.9% to 9.4%), negative reversions worsened from -6.3% to -9.6%. In other words, there’s still pricing pressure on landlords.


Ethos Capital saw NAV grow in the past three months on an adjusted basis (JSE: EPE)

And yes, you do need to adjust for the Ethos unbundling

When an investment holding company unbundles part of its portfolio to shareholders, it is literally making itself smaller. You therefore need to adjust for this when comparing the net asset value to the previous period, otherwise it will look as though the value decreased when the reality is that some assets were simply passed upwards to shareholders.

This is the case at Ethos Capital, which unbundled R121.3 million worth of Brait shares in July this year. It was a busy period of other corporate actions, with R73.3 million of Brait exchangeable bonds sold to Brait, the sale of Synerlytic for R286.4 million and the sale of Adumo for R55.9 million. This is why net debt has come down to R234 million as at the end of September and R180 million based on subsequent repayments.

Thanks to valuation gains in Optasia which more than offset some pressure in the unlisted asset portfolio, the net asset value per share is up 5.6% on a like-for-like basis since June 2024. The NAV per share is R6.95 and the current share price is R5.00.


Southern Sun tightens up its earnings guidance (JSE: SSU)

This has been an excellent period for the group

Southern Sun released a preliminary trading statement back in mid-September, dealing with the six months ended September. They initially guided for an increase in earnings of at least 20% – the vaguest disclosure allowed under JSE rules. When you see that, there’s always a great chance that the move could be a lot higher.

Indeed, a further trading statement confirms growth in HEPS of 33% to 39% and adjusted HEPS of 33% to 44%. Either way, that’s excellent.

Even more encouragingly, the group notes that trading in the month of September was a highlight, so the exit velocity in this period sets them up very nicely for the busy summer.

Interim results are due to be released on 21 November. With the share price up 60% year-to-date, there will be many interested parties.


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • An entity associated with the Sassoon family has sold R37.6 million worth of shares in Sasfin (JSE: SFN) to Wiphold.
    • An associate of Michael Georgiou, the man who put together Accelerate Property Fund (JSE: APF), was forced to sell R25 million worth of shares pursuant to a lending arrangement. This is what happens when shares are put up as security and things don’t go well. Together with previous similar sales, this means that RMB now holds 6.99% in the company, based on lending arrangements being settled with shares.
    • There’s another sale by the director of CMH (JSE: CMH) who has been selling shares recently, this time to the value of R3.2 million.
    • Dr Christo Wiese and an associate of the Collins family each bought shares in Collins Property Group (JSE: CPP) worth R313k (so a total of R626k).
  • The Capital & Regional (JSE: CRP) deal with NewRiver REIT has been strongly supported by shareholders. This means that the scheme of arrangement will go ahead and Capital & Regional will soon disappear from the JSE.
  • Lighthouse Properties (JSE: LTE) has noted potential tax changes in Spain that would eliminate the benefit of SOCIMI structures. Although Spain is 42% of Lighthouse’s assets, they further note that even if the tax change goes ahead (and it’s by no means a guarantee), it won’t have a material impact on distributable earnings. Interestingly, Vukile (JSE: VKE) noted the same potential issue but wasn’t prepared to make a statement on materiality.
  • Workforce Holdings (JSE: WKF) is trying to head for the exit, releasing the circular detailing the offer by Force Holdings. Force Holdings has 45.63% of shares in issue and concert parties to the offer have another 51.61%, so the shares eligible to participate in the scheme represent just 2.76% of issued shares. Despite such a narrow voting class, the scheme consideration is a premium of just 16% to the 30 day VWAP. Irrevocable undertakings have been obtained from holders of 32.71% of the shares eligible to vote, so they actually have a long way to go here and I’m not sure the premium is juicy enough for such a small voting class. Time will tell.
  • Universal Partners (JSE: UPL) released its quarterly earnings. The net asset value per share has decreased by 0.8% in the past year in GBP. You simply won’t find a more varied portfolio than this, ranging from a dental group in the UK down to the company that always makes me laugh: Propelair, which claims to have reinvented the toilet. The fact that Propelair is always behind on its business plan suggests that perhaps the toilet didn’t need to be reinvented?
  • Montauk Renewables (JSE: MKR) releases its 10-Q each quarter and doesn’t add any management commentary on SENS, making it painful to try and follow the company. That’s a real pity, as earnings per share have almost doubled year-on-year for the nine months to September, driven by a decent increase in revenue.
  • Burstone Group (JSE: BTN) has completed the transaction that puts in place a strategic partnership with Blackstone in Europe.
  • Europa Metals (JSE: EUZ) has completed its disposal of the Toral Project in exchange for shares in Denarius Metals. This effectively turns Europa Metals into a cash shell under AIM rules on the London exchange, with the planned reverse takeover by Viridian Metals set to address that issue.

GHOST BITES (AVI | Bidcorp | Mantengu Mining | Metair | MultiChoice | Powerfleet | Premier | Quantum | Santam)

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AVI flags difficult trading conditions (JSE: AVI)

Consumers still aren’t out of the woods

As we hope for a strong peak season for retailers in South Africa, AVI has given a sobering update on sales for the four months to October. Interest rates and other issues like unemployment remain a problem despite all the GNU excitement.

For the four months, revenue was 3.4% higher year-on-year. That suggests little or no growth in volumes, with the group focusing instead on gross profit margin and other initiatives to extract as much value as possible from the difficult sales environment. This is something that AVI is particularly good at.

I&J remains under pressure from low fishing catch rates. The abalone business is also being impacted by lower prices in Asian markets.

There’s all to play for as we head into December.


Bidcorp impacted by the strong rand (JSE: BID)

The underlying business remains solid

Bidcorp is one of the best rand hedges on the JSE, boasting an exceptional international business. When the rand strengthens, this impacts the translation of the international earnings into rands. Thankfully for Bidcorp shareholders, the rand doesn’t strengthen very often.

For the four months to October, the constant currency results at Bidcorp show 10% growth in trading profit, which is solid. Constant currency HEPS is up 8%, a particularly strong result in a period when inflation has been only 2% for the group. They reckon the stronger rand has had a negative impact of 300 basis points on the numbers, so HEPS as reported would be more like 5% growth.

This growth has been achieved at a time when consumers are still quite weak, with retailers enjoying a period in which consumers are eating more at home and less at restaurants. Bidcorp is focused on the restaurant and hospitality sector, so that makes things harder for them.

Despite major weather and other disruptions, Europe (up 10% constant currency) and the UK (up 8% on the same basis) were the main winners. Emerging markets grew 5%, with South Africa noted as a performance highlight – perhaps a surprising outcome given some of the other comments around consumers by South African companies. Australasia grew revenue by only 3%.

Margins are a concern, as inflationary pressures on costs exceed the underlying inflation in food i.e. the basis on which Bidcorp can increase prices. EBITDA margin is slightly higher year-on-year, driven by better gross profit margin that more than offset the operating cost pressure.

And of course, Bidcorp is never far from a bolt-on acquisition. They’ve already completed three this year with an aggregate value of R1.2 billion.

This remains an exceptional business.


Mantengu Mining swings into the green (JSE: MTU)

The ramp-up in production shows what’s possible

Mantengu Mining has released results for the six months to August. The year-on-year moves will make you dizzy, with revenue up from R13.1 million to R115.9 million as production was ramped up. Gross profit jumped from R1.5 million to R53 million and as you can imagine, this did wonderful things for profitability. HEPS came in at 2 cents per share vs. a loss of 10 cents per share in the prior period.

Notably, there’s still no dividend here as the company is in an expansionary capex phase. They are also busy with acquisitions, like Blue Ridge Platinum and Sublime Technologies, while looking for other opportunities in the mining, mining services and energy sectors.

Although the balance sheet is extremely light on cash as at the reporting date, they have access to various funding lines including a share subscription facility agreement with GEM Global Yield.

And yes, I’m still scratching my head about the $100k acquisition price for Sublime Technologies despite the financials of that business. It makes absolutely no sense to me.


Metair is closer to breathing a sigh of relief (JSE: MTA)

Turkish competition approval is out of the way

Metair is in the process of disposing of its business in Turkey. If you’ve been following the company’s fortunes, you’ll know that this disposal is absolutely critical in their lives.

Thankfully, the Turkish Competition Board has confirmed that its consent is not needed for the deal, so that’s essentially a deemed approval for legal purposes.

This means the remaining condition relates to a financing agreement. If that can be achieved, Metair will unlock capital to fix its balance sheet that has suffered terribly from recent performance.


MultiChoice is losing subscribers at a rapid rate (JSE: MCG)

I’m really not sure how this ends if the Canal+ deal doesn’t go through

MultiChoice has released results for the six months to September. Having suffered through an unwatchable feed of the Springboks game on my DStv Stream TV app, I’m afraid that my sympathy is low. They lost a spectacular 1.8 million subscribers in the past year, or 11% of their base.

They lost 5% of their subscribers in South Africa and 15% in the Rest of Africa. Considering the sheer amount of money that Rest of Africa has swallowed up, it’s particularly worrying that they are losing subscribers at such a rate there. If there’s any silver lining, it’s that Showmax grew 30% year-on-year.

Despite shedding subscribers at this pace, revenue was up 4% excluding forex and M&A impacts. Revenue was down 10% on a reported basis, with forex pressures playing an important role here. You can’t ignore the forex issues here, so focus on the reported numbers without forex adjustments, like the 46% decline in trading profit.

The cash cows in the group (South Africa and Irdeto) generated cash flow of R3.3 billion. The group invested R1.8 billion into Showmax and experienced a R0.9 billion outflow in the rest of Africa.

MultiChoice now has a negative equity position of R2.7 billion. They generated adjusted core headline earnings of just R7 million (yes, with an “m” not a “b”) for this period.

At this point in time, I struggle to see any positive outcomes unless the Canal+ deal goes through. Engagements with regulatory authorities are underway.


Powerfleet is growing faster in the lower margin side of the business (JSE: PWR)

But major cost savings more than made up for it

Powerfleet (which acquired MiX Telematics) has released results for the first half of the 2025 financial year. This means there are two quarters worth of results that include the MiX numbers.

The year-on-year stuff is therefore not hugely useful, but I will highlight that product revenue was up 13% and service revenue was just 5% higher. Considering that product revenue adjusted gross margin is 35% vs. 63.7% in services, investors will want to see those growth rates swap around over time.

The group has already realised $13.5 million in annual cost synergies from the MiX deal, so they are halfway to the two-year target. This led to adjusted operating expenses decreasing by 5%. In turn, this drove a 41% increase in adjusted EBITDA.

The MiX deal is actually old news for the company, with the focus now on the Fleet Complete acquisition and generating growth from the acquired relationships as soon as possible.


Premier turns modest revenue growth into juicy profits (JSE: PMR)

This is the shape you want to see on an income statement

For the six months to September, revenue at Premier Group only increased by 3.7%. That’s not exciting at all, yet HEPS grew by 32.4%! How does a shape like this happen?

It all comes down to operating leverage, which talks to the extent of fixed costs in the cost base. Even small increases in revenue can lead to large increases in profits when there are many fixed costs. Notably, a decrease in revenue therefore also drives a much larger drop in profits, so these business models can be volatile.

When they work, they work really well though. At Millbake for example, revenue was up 2.6% and EBITDA was up 15.8%. This was strong enough to improve group EBITDA by 100 basis points to 11.9%, despite the International business seeing EBITDA decline 2.1% even though revenue was up 9.7%.

Thanks to repayments on debt, the EBITDA increase translated into an even better HEPS increase because net finance costs were down 18.2%. Remember, finance costs are shown below EBITDA, which stands for Earning Before Interest, Tax, Depreciation and Amortisation.

Cash generated from operations increased by 13.5%, exactly in line with EBITDA growth. This talks to strong cash quality of earnings.

The group intends to declare a dividend when full-year results are released in June 2025.


A Quantum leap in earnings (JSE: QFH)

A further trading statement has tightened the range

Quantum Foods has released a further trading statement for the year ended September. Things are way better in the poultry industry, as evidenced by these numbers.

They expect to swing from a headline loss of 17.4 cents to HEPS of between 78.7 cents and 82.1 cents. Detailed results are expected to be released on 29 November.


It sounds like things are good at Santam (JSE: SNT)

There’s decent growth and underwriting results within target range

Santam has released an operational update for the nine months to September 2024. The important point to highlight is that underwriting results were within the 5% to 10% target range, despite all the competition in this space and the usual major weather events.

The conventional insurance business achieved net earned premium growth of 8%. Due to underlying performance in the various insurance lines, the impact of R960 million (net of reinsurance) from weather-related and other significant losses was offset.

Another important point to highlight is that the investment return on the group’s capital portfolios were ahead of expectations. These returns are an important component of overall returns to shareholders in insurance companies.

With much progress having been made on the risks in the property book, Santam is painting a bullish picture.


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • An associate of PJ Mouton bought shares in Curro (JSE: COH) worth R20.1 million.
    • A director of Mondi (JSE: MNP) bought shares in the company worth £118k.
  • MTN (JSE: MTN) and MTN Zakhele Futhi (JSE: MTNZF) announced that all conditions for the extension of the MTN Zakhele Futhi scheme have been fulfilled. The scheme will now mature on 23 November 2027, giving the MTN share price time to (hopefully) improve.
  • Hot on the heels of a capital markets day for debt investors, Discovery (JSE: DSY) appears to have hosted a day for institutional equity investors as well. The entire presentation (all 177 pages of it) is available here. And no, I don’t think you earn any Vitality points for reading it.
  • Just when you thought things couldn’t possibly get any spicier at Trustco (JSE: TTO), the company has decided to upgrade its American Depositary Receipts program to a full Nasdaq listing. This is the same company that had plenty to say about how painful the JSE regulations are. The US is even stricter and vastly more expensive in terms of professional fees like lawyers. Trustco plans to move its primary listing to the Nasdaq, so they will be fully regulated by US requirements – including quarterly reporting etc. Interesting.
  • Sable Exploration and Mining (JSE: SXM) released a trading statement dealing with the period ended August. They expect a headline loss per share of between 8 and 9.7 cents, which is much better than the comparable headline loss per share of 72.65 cents.
  • Zeder (JSE: ZED) recently announced a 20 cents per share special dividend. In an early update during the day, they noted that approval by the SARB had not yet been obtained. Later in the day, they got the approval, so the payment date for the dividend is 25 November.
  • In case you are a shareholder in Visual International (JSE: VIS), be aware that the circular convening the general meeting for the specific issue of shares for cash has been sent out.

GHOST BITES (Boxer | Harmony | Life Healthcare | Omnia | Raubex | Stor-Age | Sibanye | Vodacom | Woolworths)

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Boxer’s pre-listing statement has been released by Pick n Pay (JSE: PIK)

22 years of turnover growth have brought Boxer to this point

Boxer is without a doubt in the jewel in Pick n Pay’s broken crown. In the latest interim period, it grew turnover 12.0% or 7.7% is on a like-for-like basis. The two-year store roll-out compound annual growth rate (CAGR) is 14%, so they are expanding at pace. It’s the right time to get the market excited about the story and willing to pay up for it, injecting some desperately needed capital into the Pick n Pay balance sheet.

The first few weeks of the new financial period have seen 5.2% like-for-like growth at Boxer, admittedly against a very strong base.

Boxer appears to have a huge growth runway ahead of it, with 4.2% market share of the formal grocery market. You do need to be careful though, as the group makes no effort to win market share in higher income brackets. They have 68% of the discount grocery retail market, which is substantial. Thankfully, as more South Africans move from informal retail into formal retail, their market is growing. Based on expansion into areas where there is currently no Boxer Superstore, they reckon they have the potential to triple current revenue levels over the long term.

Despite the obvious expansion potential, they intend to pay 40% of headline earnings as a dividend.

The offer price range for the listing is R42 to R54 per share. If they get a price at the mid-point, there will be 477 million shares in issue, suggesting a market cap of R22.9 billion. Boxer generated headline earnings of R1.4 billion for the year ended February 2024. That’s an outdated number of course, but it implies a mid-teens Price/Earnings multiple for the group at the mid-point.

I suspect there will be a bit of a feeding frenzy over these shares, with institutions getting in at a juicy price and the share price popping to over 20x P/E when it starts trading. Let’s wait and see.


Harmony’s results look strong, but production was flat (JSE: HAR)

The gold price is doing the heavy lifting here

The gold sector is having a fabulous time at the moment. In Harmony’s latest quarterly results, they show a 21% increase in the average gold price received and a 23% increase in gold revenue. This more than makes up for a 14% increase in all-in sustaining costs, driving operating cash flow 60% higher! Lovely.

Production was only flat year-on-year though, so that’s the obvious area where things could’ve been better. The South Africa underground high-grade operations saw production up 15% thanks to Mponeng. The South African underground operations saw production dip 10%, so that’s where the difficulties were experienced. Production was steady at the South African surface operations and down 11% in the international business.

Although uranium is still a small part of the overall story, it’s a useful by-product of the gold extraction process at Moab Khotsong. Uranium production decreased by 10%, but the price was up 39%. Uranium revenue was R199 million for the quarter.

Mines constantly have to invest to keep their operations ticking over. Capex was up 17% in this period, which looks fine in the context of such strong operating cash growth.


Life gets a huge boost from LMI (JSE: LHC)

The hospital business is delivering the usual single-digit growth

Life Healthcare has released a further trading statement dealing with the year ended September. There’s a jump in HEPS from continuing operations of between 55.9% and 60.9%, which certainly isn’t the stuff we are used to seeing from a hospital group.

As expected, a further read shows that there’s a major once-off boost here: income of $36 million from the sub-licensing arrangement of one of Life Molecular Imaging’s (LMI) early-stage novel radiotherapeutic and radio diagnostic products. That’s legitimate and exciting income, but certainly not an indication of the kind of growth rates that can be maintained.

The dose of realism is that paid patient days grew 1.6% in the acute hospital business and fell 2.6% in the complementary business. Overall volume growth was thus 1.2%, with a boost in revenue per paid patient day taking the southern Africa revenue up by between 7.5% and 7.9%. That’s pretty good actually, although dwarfed by LMI with revenue growth of 180%.

Another important point is that the repayment of international debt (thanks to the sale of Alliance Medical Group) brought interest costs down by 66%. This is why HEPS from continuing and discontinued operations looks even better, up by between 69.4% and 77.3%.


Margins up at Omnia, but not much HEPS excitement (JSE: OMN)

And the issue is on the tax line, not the finance costs line

When you see a company with decent operating profit growth but a disappointing HEPS outcome, it’s usually because finance costs have gone up and the bankers are getting the uptick in performance. Not so at Omnia, where a dispute with the Zimbabwean Revenue Authority means that an operating profit increase of 17% has translated into HEPS growth of just 2%!

This isn’t Omnia’s first tax rodeo, either. They are still sorting out a dispute with SARS going back to the 2014 to 2016 tax years.

Tax weirdness aside, investors can at least feel good about operating margins expanding from 6.5% to 7.3%. Group working capital was down slightly despite the growth in revenue, so they are also managing the business efficiently from a cash perspective.

The Agriculture segment saw revenue dip by 4%, but operating profit increase by 27% thanks to commodity prices and operational improvements over the period. In Mining, revenue was up 15% and operating profit 18%, so that’s a good story from top to bottom. Chemicals, sadly, is a completely different situation – although revenue was up 6%, there was an operating loss of R23 million after an operating profit of R5 million in the prior period. I don’t understand enough about the chemicals market, but it has severely hurt Sasol and the same seems to be happening at Omnia.

The share price is up just 2% year-to-date, reflecting the subdued movement in HEPS.


Raubex posts a banging set of numbers (JSE: RBX)

They are the clear winners in the construction sector

Raubex is a wonderful example of the power of stock picking. At a time when the narrative in most of the construction sector is subdued, this company has delivered spectacular returns in the past year. The best part is that the earnings are backing up the share price growth, so this isn’t just a case of improved sentiment.

For the six months to August, Raubex grew revenue by 29.7% and operating profit by 34.7%. Not only is that excellent growth, but also an improvement in margins. It gets better as you move down the income statement, with HEPS up 49.8%.

The cash story may well be the biggest highlight of all, with cash from operations up 111.5%! This means they had no problem increasing the interim dividend by 49%, in line with HEPS.

If there’s anything to put even the tiniest blemish on these numbers, it’s that the order book reduced from R25.55 billion to R24.50 billion. Management sounds bullish on increases to the order book going forward, with a robust pipeline particularly in South Africa.

If we look deeper at the segmental numbers, things predictably get a lot more volatile. For examples, Materials Handing and Mining saw operating profit margin drop sharply from 10.9% to 8.4%. Revenue was up 39.1% in that division, so they still ended up in the green. Construction Materials grew revenue by 18% and saw operating profit nearly double, with operating profit margin up from 5.1% to 8.5%. Roads and Earthworks also had a great story to tell, with revenue up 31.2% and operating profit margin up from 5.6% to 7.4%, leading to an increase in operating profit of 74%. The Infrastructure business grew revenue by 26.9%, but margin decreased from 7.9% to 7.3% and so operating profit was “only” 15.9% higher. Finally, the International division saw strong results across Rest of Africa (operating profit up 51.4%) and Australia (operating profit up 13.9%).

Overall, it’s hard to fault this set of numbers.


A lower dividend at Stor-Age (JSE: SSS)

At least the net asset value per share is up

If memory serves, Stor-Age warned previously that the dividend payout ratio would be decreasing. This allows the company to retain some of its earnings to fund further growth, a major challenge faced by REITs who are effectively cash conduits for shareholders. Most REITs don’t pay out 100% of their distributable income per share as a dividend, so Stor-Age is simply aligning with the rest of the sector here.

Still, it means that the interim dividend is down 6.8% despite distributable income per share being up 3.5%. The payout ratio is now 90%.

Dividend aside, the underlying metrics look strong. Rental income increased by 10.8% in South Africa and 6.8% in the UK for this interim period, whilst net property operating income was up 12.0% in South Africa and 87.4% in the UK.

The net investment property value increased by 5.4%. The balance sheet is healthy, with a loan-to-value of 31.3%. All this has contributed to 8.3% growth in the net asset value per share.

Still, if you combine the net asset value per share growth with the decrease in the dividend, the total return to shareholders is minimal. Despite this, the share price is up 27% in the past 12 months. Keep an eye on this one, which has been a market darling and is thus ripe for a wobbly.

The net asset value per share is R16.8554 and the share price closed at 1.7% higher on the day of results at R15.21.


Sibanye-Stillwater locks in a gold wage agreement (JSE: SSW)

This is of critical importance with such favourable gold prices

With the ongoing pain in the PGM side of the business, the gold operations are the best part of Sibanye-Stillwater. It’s therefore beyond critical that there are no labour disruptions, as that would truly be a disaster for the group.

It’s good news that Sibanye has concluded wage negotiations in the SA gold operations, effective July 2024 to June 2025. Although this only gives certainty until the middle of next year, it’s a step in the right direction. The wage increase is 5.5%, so that feels fair for all involved.


Vodacom reminds me once more why I don’t like the telecoms sector (JSE: VOD)

The interim dividend is down 6.6%

Vodacom’s revenue increased by just 1% for the six months to September 2024, with substantial forex headwinds as a problem. Much like sector peer MTN, Vodacom has gone looking for growth in Africa and has found consistently depreciating currencies.

Although they try hard to push the constant currency growth story, also known as the “pretend we aren’t in these risky markets and just imagine the possibilities” approach, we know better from MTN experience. You can’t ignore these risks, hence I completely ignore the normalised growth.

HEPS fell by 19.4% and the dividend is down 6.6%, so they’ve increased the payout ratio in an effort to stem the bleeding for shareholders. Operating cash flow fell 18.3% and free cash flow came in at negative R1 billion thanks to the extent of capital expenditure.

Will things work out well with the business in Egypt? It grew by 44.1% in local currency, which is encouraging. It just doesn’t help if these currencies keep falling off a cliff.

This is a really tough sector, with minimal growth opportunities in South Africa (Vodacom didn’t even get approval for its fibre deal with Remgro) and many risks beyond our borders.


Some positive momentum at Woolworths (JSE: WHL)

Australia is still a mess, but the rest is looking better

Woolworths has released a trading update for the 18 weeks ended 3 November. At group level, an increase in turnover of 6.5% really isn’t bad, especially when you start digging deeper.

Woolworths Food managed growth of 9.6% excluding Absolute Pets. With that acquisition included, sales growth was 12.1%, but that’s not a very useful metric. Instead, it’s better to consider price inflation for the period of 6.2%, with trading space (excluding Absolute Pets) up 2% as the group invested in expansion once more. Online sales were up 36.9%, driven by Woolies Dash which grew 54.4%.

Food isn’t where the problems have been recently. The battered and bruised Fashion Beauty and Home (FBH) business seems to be improving, with sales up 3.5% overall. This does however include the winter clearance sale, so be careful of extrapolating this for the entire interim period. Still, it’s a green result despite price movement of just 1.9%, so volumes were positive. Beauty was a highlight, up 20.6% as Woolworths invests in that category. Online sales increased by 36.5%.

The Woolworths Financial Services book was down 3.5% year-on-year and the annualised impairment rate was better at 5.9% vs. 7.5% in the prior period.

This brings us neatly to the end of the good news. Australia remains a huge problem, with Country Road Group suffering a sales decline of 8.8% overall and 13.8% on a comparable store basis. Trading space decreased by 1.6%. They’ve flagged that operating margins have also gone the wrong way, so brace yourself for ugly numbers from that part of the world.


Nibbles:

  • TeleMasters (JSE: TLM) renewed its cautionary announcement regarding a potential offer from B-BBEE investors. The potential acquirer is in the process of securing funding and nothing is guaranteed yet, so for now they are still under cautionary.
  • Acsion (JSE: ACS) released a related party announcement that is a good reminder of just how odd the place is. Firstly, one of their subsidiaries is Hey Joe, a restaurant and brewery in Franschhoek – not the kind of asset you’ll usually find in a listed company. Then, said brewing company has appointed K Anastasi Projects (which happens to be owned by the CEO of Acsion) to construct 69 hotel units on the property. The contract is worth R87.5 million and is thus a small related party transaction under JSE rules. This requires a fairness opinion from an independent expert. Merchantec Capital has opined that the contract is fair, so no further approvals are necessary for the contract.
  • Trustco (JSE: TTO) has announced a general progress update on its corporate transactions. There are a bunch of underlying transactions that are being dealt with in one circular, the drafting of which will start when they publish 2024 financial statements. The Legal Shield deal circular is in progress at the JSE and is going in for its third submission soon (circulars go through several reviews). The resources transaction is also in process at the JSE, with the Preliminary Economic Assessment with the readers panel for review. There’s a lot going on at Trustco and they are doing a decent job here of keeping shareholders in the loop.

UNLOCK THE STOCK: Calgro M3

Unlock the Stock is a platform designed to let retail investors experience life as a sell-side analyst. Corporate management teams give a presentation and then we open the floor to an interactive Q&A session, facilitated by the hosts.

We are grateful to the South African team from Lumi Global, who look after the webinar technology for us.

In the 45th edition of Unlock the Stock, Calgro M3 returned to the platform to talk about the performance and prospects – and of course, for the outgoing management team to explain where they are going and why. The Finance Ghost co-hosted this event with Mark Tobin of Coffee Microcaps and the team from Keyter Rech Investor Solutions.

Watch the recording here:

GHOST BITES (Grindrod | Huge | ISA | Richemont | Sephaku | The Foschini Group)

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Grindrod’s Mozambican headache is over – for now (JSE: GND)

That was quick, wasn’t it?

Grindrod’s port and terminal operations in Mozambique have been an important part of the recent story. Due to post-election violence in the country, they announced on Thursday that operations had been suspended. A day later, the suspension had been lifted.

Despite the incredibly quick resolution, the market didn’t jump back into Grindrod. It’s down 4% in the past week. Perhaps there’s still some nervousness around potential further issues. Either way, for those who enjoy a speculative punt, this chart is interesting:


Huge Group’s net asset value is higher (JSE: HUG)

Nothing is as huge as the discount to NAV, though

Huge Group accounts for its group as an investment holding company. Given the vast discounts to net asset value (NAV) at which these structures trade on the JSE, that was a decision that I doubt they will look back on with much joy. Sure enough, the NAV has moved up to R9.84 and the share price is stuck at R2.00.

When you see this, the very first thing you should assume is that the market is right until proven otherwise. The directors are incentivised to value the assets as optimistically as possible. The market is incentivised to be more cautious. I use the latter as a safer point of departure.

I guess it also helps that I’ve looked at Huge before, so I know that they value R490 million worth of preference shares at an hilarious required rate of return of 10.75%. That’s a spread of just 138 basis points over where 10-year government bonds are trading right now. It’s little wonder that the market isn’t interested at that price, particularly when the total investment portfolio is valued at just under R1.6 billion. These prefs are therefore a material part of the story, with Huge trying to justify the valuation based on contractual cash flows in the prefs. Those cash flows are only as good as the underlying business paying them, which I somehow doubt is less risky than e.g. South Africa’s biggest banks, which have a significantly higher cost of equity than 10.75%.

As for the rest of the group, discount rates don’t look too unreasonable actually. The group’s track record just gets in the way, as the market doesn’t look very favourably upon Huge. Despite being a South African focused business, the share price has returned exactly nothing this year at a time when the rest of the market has rallied strongly.

Again, the market is telling you something here.


ISA Holdings reports better profits despite a dip in sales (JSE: ISA)

Margin mix is important here

ISA Holdings is an interesting technology company that has delivered a share price return of 60% this year. The improved sentiment around South African stocks has certainly helped here.

For the six months to August, the group managed to increase HEPS by 10% despite turnover taking an 8% knock. The turnover dip was caused by timing differences on larger contracts, which makes sense in a group of this size. Due to the focus on margin mix and of course the timing differences as well, gross margin jumped from 47% to 55%. This is why profits went the right way in the end.

Another highlight is the share of profits from equity-accounted investment DataProof, which jumped by 25%. Cybersecurity is a very important growth area at the moment.

Shareholders will keep an eye on cash, which fell 25%. Although there are good reasons for it, one of the factors is a negative move in working capital that management explains as being due to timing differences. That’s an entirely plausible explanation, but still worth confirming at year-end.


The word “resilient” isn’t what Richemont shareholders want to see (JSE: CFR)

With flat sales, the share price fell 5% on the day

The luxury sector has been having a tricky time recently. Richemont could only manage flat sales in constant currency for the first six months of the year. As reported, sales came in 1% lower. Of course, when you dig deeper into the segments, you find much more variance. Asia Pacific dragged the team down with an 18% decline, while the Americas grew double digits and Japan managed 42%! Asia Pacific is just so big that the decline in that region was enough to offset all the growth elsewhere.

Another way to slice and dice the numbers is by looking at operating segments. Jewellery Maisons grew 2% and Specialist Watchmakers fell by 17%, so there’s quite the divergence there. The margins are also very different, with Jewellery Maisons at a 32.9% operating margin and Specialist Watchmakers at 9.7%.

Sales may have been “resilient” but the same can’t be said for operating margin from continuing operations, down a nasty 17% as operating margin contracted by 410 basis points to 21.9%. Cash flow generated from operating activities also showed exactly what shareholders don’t want to see: a drop of 25%.

The discontinued operation is YNAP and the non-cash write-down in that business has had a significant impact on earnings at Richemont. Discontinued operations contributed a loss of €1.3 billion this year vs. a loss of €655 million in the prior year. Although they will sell that business to Mytheresa, the pain may not be over yet – it’s a share-for-share deal, so if things keep getting worse, Richemont will just end up recognising losses on the Mytheresa stake instead.

In summary, HEPS fell by 21% and the share price is now down 3.7% year-to-date. That doesn’t tell the full story though, with a pretty serious double top in the middle of the year that shows how severely it has come off the 52-week highs:


The construction industry remains subdued, so read Sephaku’s numbers carefully (JSE: SEP)

You can’t extrapolate this growth in profits

Sephaku has released results for the six months to September. The underlying theme is one of little to no excitement in the construction industry, evidenced by a slight decline in group revenue. The story looks completely different for profitability though, with HEPS up from 7.54 cents to 13.78 cents – a jump of 83%!

How can this be? The answer lies in the SepCem profit contribution, which swung from a loss last year of R14 million to profit of R1.5 million. This is because EBIT margin in that business normalised at 4.8% in this period vs. just 1.1% in the comparable period due to supply and maintenance issues.

At Metier, the subsidiary within Sephaku, EBIT margin dipped by 40 basis points to 8.0% and profit came in slightly slower than last year at R36.5 million.

So, the important thing is to avoid interpreting the HEPS jump as an improvement in the construction sector. The narrative is one of subdued activity, with the HEPS increase due to the base effect of a highly problematic period last year rather than anything else.


Sales are down across The Foschini Group (JSE: TFG)

Yet the dividend is 6.7% higher

The Foschini Group certainly knows how to give shareholders something to smile about. Even though group revenue for the six months ended September was down 1.4%, gross profit was up 2.5% – and they point out that the R12.8 billion in gross profit is a record number. As a retailer should essentially be growing every single year due to inflation, each year should theoretically be a record! Still, it’s all about the narrative.

There’s so sign of any records further down the income statement, with operating income before finance costs down 3.4% and HEPS down 5.6%. Despite this, the group then gives shareholders another nugget of happiness: an increase in the dividend of 6.7%.

The third bone thrown to shareholders comes in the form of recent improvements in sales. Group sales were down 3.5% for the first 21 weeks and ended 2% lower for the 26 weeks, so there’s been a significant improvement across the group since September. In the last 5 weeks of the period, sales in TFG Africa were up a meaty 8.3%. TFG London grew 0.3% in those 5 weeks and TFG Australia was 0.1% lower. Along with the dividend increase, I suspect that this is why the share price closed 5% higher.

It’s interesting to note that they are more fully stocked than this time last year, with inventory up 7.5% despite lower sales. This is due to port delays in the comparable period that impacted stock levels at TFG Africa, so things seem to have normalised.

Within TFG Africa, clothing sales fell 1% year-on-year. Although the Chinese competition in the market must be playing a role here, they also had a lot of clearance activity in the comparable period. This explains why gross margins increased this year but sales growth was negative, as clearance sales in the base period would boost sales and punish gross margin.

Special mention must go to Bash, the online platform that grew sales 47.9%. It now contributes 5.6% of TFG Africa’s sales.

Looking abroad, TFG London is in trouble. Sales fell 8.2% in GBP and gross profit was down 3.1%, with some of the pain at least offset by a focus on gross margin. In TFG Australia, they are also complaining about consumer pressures as sales fell 2.4% in AUD. Again, the focus is firmly on gross margin.

Despite the challenges overseas, TFG is moving ahead with the acquisition of a business called White Stuff in the UK. Shareholders would love to see some green stuff, particularly in the column showing the percentage change year-on-year for offshore sales!


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • The largest shareholder in Exemplar REITail (JSE: EXP) will be unbundling 10,000,000 Exemplar shares to its own shareholders. Whilst this doesn’t immediately change the ultimate beneficial ownership of the shares, it could logically lead to some further trading in shares as they will now be more widely held. At the current price of R11.50 per share, that’s R115 million worth of shares. The market cap is R3.8 billion.
  • Eastern Platinum (JSE: EPS) released results for the third quarter. Revenue fell 49.5% and mine operating income swung from positive $8 million to a loss of $1 million. Attributable net loss was $3.4 million, with lower chrome sales in the quarter as the primary culprit. The focus remains on ramping up the Zandfontein underground section at the Crocodile River Mine.
  • Oasis Crescent (JSE: OAS) shareholders, pay attention. The fund is using a reinvestment alternative for distributions, except here’s the trick: the default choice is to reinvestment the distribution, not receive the cash. Here’s the second trick: the reinvestment price is R27.57 per unit, whereas the current traded price is R19.20. That’s because the reinvestment price is set at the NAV per unit. Usually, companies set the price with reference to the market price and make the cash distribution the default, so Oasis Crescent is being cheeky here.
  • Redefine (JSE: RDF) is taking the popular route of offering a dividend reinvestment alternative, which is basically like a miniature rights issue. For some reason, they are vague about the reinvestment price though. It will only be confirmed on 19 November. I tried to download the circular to see if they give more details in there, but alas the wrong PDF was uploaded to the Redefine website on that link. So, for now, I can’t tell you anything further. If you’re a shareholder, keep your eyes open for further announcements.
  • As the Initial Reserve Milestone (as defined in the prospectus) has been achieved, Southern Palladium (JSE: SDL) has issued 1,200,000 shares upon conversion of performance rights. The thing about junior mining is that dilution over time for shareholders is guaranteed.

We’re living longer… I think

For as long as human beings have existed, we’ve pondered whether we can make our existence last longer. With rumours swirling around that today’s 30-year-olds will be tomorrow’s centenarians, I did the research to see how much is fact and how much is fiction.

I was born in 1993, which means that I exist at the younger end of the Millennial spectrum (those born between 1981 and 1996, now aged between 28 and 43). If you believe what the life insurance salesmen have to say, then members of my generation are more likely than any generation before to reach 100 years of age.

Over the past few decades, life expectancy has seen a remarkable leap across the globe. Back in 1960 (which is the earliest year that the UN started collecting global data) the average person could expect to live to a modest 52.5 years. Fast-forward to today, and that average has jumped to 72. In the UK, where they’ve been keeping records for much longer, the shift is even starker. In 1841, a British baby girl was expected to make it to just 42 years old, while a boy could hope for around 40. But by 2016, those numbers soared, with girls reaching an average of 83 and boys 79.

So, what’s the takeaway here? Thanks to the marvels of modern medicine and the power of public health, it looks as though we’re sticking around a lot longer than we once thought possible. But is it really the upward curve we think it is – and will it continue on that trajectory indefinitely?

Argument 1: Life expectancy is up

This rise in life expectancy stems from a mix of factors that came into play in the last century, like advances in public health, better nutrition, and modern medicine. Vaccinations and antibiotics slashed childhood mortality and prevented outbreaks of disease from turning into epidemics. Workplace safety standards improved, seatbelts became a thing and fewer people smoked. Heck, we even got rid of the asbestos in our ceilings and the lead plumbing in our kitchens. All of these changes addressed what we might call “preventable deaths”, i.e. deaths caused by external factors, paving the way for more people to age as nature intended.

By 2030, one in every six people worldwide will be aged 60 or over. That means the population of those 60 and older will grow from 1 billion in 2020 to a hefty 1.4 billion in the span of a decade. Fast forward to 2050, and this group will double, hitting 2.1 billion globally, with those aged 80 and above expected to triple to 426 million.

This shift towards an older population — known as population ageing — began in wealthier countries (like Japan, where 30% of the population is already over 60). But now it’s low- and middle-income countries seeing the biggest change. By 2050, nearly two-thirds of the world’s over-60 population will be living in these regions.

Argument 2: Life expectancy is the same

It might be time to acknowledge that the idea of our current super longevity is at least a little bit fueled by myths about our ancestors. Many of us believe that the ancient Greeks or Romans would have been astonished to see anyone living past middle age. But while medical advancements have indeed transformed healthcare, the assumption that our life span has skyrocketed is somewhat misleading.

What’s actually increased isn’t how long we can live but rather how many of us do live that long. Consider that life expectancy statistics usually reflect an average, which is heavily influenced by survival rates during infancy and childhood. Much of human history has seen high child mortality rates, and this reality skews average life expectancy strongly downward.

That’s why it’s commonly believed that people in ancient Greece or Rome lived to just 30 or 35. However, this doesn’t mean that adults simply dropped dead at 36; rather, high infant mortality brought down the average. In many ancient societies, a third of infants didn’t survive to their first birthday, and half of children didn’t reach age 10. For those who survived childhood, the odds improved sharply, with some living well into their 70s or beyond.

In truth, the maximum life span in ancient societies likely wasn’t drastically different from today. Age limits in Roman politics illustrate this beautifully: the cursus honorum – the structured path of political offices for ambitious young men – required a minimum age of 30 to stand for quaestor, the first official position. For the esteemed role of consul, however, the minimum age was set at 43.

So life may have been slightly shorter on average, lacking today’s medical interventions, but it was not dramatically so. A society can have a low average life expectancy due to infant mortality and maternal risks, yet still include individuals who live into their 80s or 90s.

This is why using averages (rather than other statistical measures like the median) is dangerous.

Argument 3: Life expectancy is capped

Using demographic survivorship metrics from national vital statistics in the eight countries with the longest-lived populations – Australia, France, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland – as well as Hong Kong and the United States, a recent study examined trends in death rates and life expectancy from 1990 to 2019. Their findings suggest that since 1990, gains in life expectancy have slowed across all of these regions.

It makes sense if you consider that we’re comparing this period to what came before. In the early twentieth century, advances in public health and medicine sparked a longevity revolution, marked by significant leaps in life expectancy at birth. While it previously took centuries to see just a one year increase in average life expectancy, the twentieth century saw a dramatic shift, with life expectancy rising by about three years per decade.

So, does that mean that life expectancy will just keep rising, as predicted? Not exactly. While we’ve done a great job of addressing the mortality risks that we can prevent, we neither fully understand nor know how to stop ageing from happening. Until we can do that, it seems very likely that our life expectancy will remain capped under 100 years of age.

The stats are fascinating: for female life expectancy to go up from 88 to 89 years in countries with long-lived populations, there would need to be a 20.3% drop in mortality across all ages and causes. For men, raising life expectancy from 82 to 83 years would require a 9.5% reduction in mortality at every age.

Between 1950 and 2019, the age at which people die has become more predictable in long-lived populations, with fewer people dying very young or very old. This trend has occurred even as life expectancy has gradually increased. Although it’s theoretically possible that more people could start living to even older ages, there’s no strong evidence for this yet. Radical increases in lifespan seem unlikely unless major progress is made in slowing the ageing process itself.

What does it all mean?

Well… I’m still not sure, actually. I guess it’s true that life expectancy is up across the twentieth century as a whole, but not really because we’re getting older; rather, because we’re not dying younger. More of us will get older, but older means 80s, not 100s. At the end of the day, only a few of us will live to be 100 or more. That’s not very different from what happened in ancient Rome, where Cicero’s wife Terentia lived to 103 and actress Lucceia performed on stage at 100.

At the heart of all this lies our fragile understanding of ageing, this curious side-effect of mortality that we hate and crave in equal measure. Until we figure out how to stall it – or even reverse it – we really have to question our desire to live longer. After all, where’s the fun in spending the final two decades of your life as an old person?

Unless, of course, you sell retirement products. Then life expectancy is a wonderful marketing tool.

About the author: Dominique Olivier

Dominique Olivier is the founder of human.writer, where she uses her love of storytelling and ideation to help brands solve problems.

She is a weekly columnist in Ghost Mail and collaborates with The Finance Ghost on Ghost Mail Weekender, a Sunday publication designed to help you be more interesting.

Dominique can be reached on LinkedIn here.

GHOST BITES (AngloGold | Gold Fields | Grindrod | Lesaka | MultiChoice | Sappi | Truworths)


AngloGold and Gold Fields are struggling to get approval for a joint venture in Ghana (JSE: ANG | JSE: GFI)

And separately, AngloGold released Q3 earnings

I’ll deal with the joint venture news first, which is that there is no news thanks to ongoing delays in getting approval for the proposed deal in Ghana. The plans for a joint venture between Gold Fields’ Tarkwa Mine and AngloGold’s Iduapriem Mine in Ghana were first announced more than 18 months ago. With national elections due to be held in Ghana in December, this deal certainly hangs in the balance.

Separately, AngloGold released earnings that remind us of just how good things are right now in the gold sector. With Q3 2024 as their strongest production quarter of the year thus far, the year-on-year jump in EBITDA is a rather ridiculous 339%! Free cash flow came in at $347 million vs. just $20 million in the base period.

The story comes through most strongly when you look at headline earnings, which swung from a loss of $194 million in Q3 2023 to positive $236 million in this period.

Q3 was a particularly strong swing, with the year-to-date numbers still showing great improvement in adjusted EBITDA from $846 million to $1.863 billion. Headline earnings on a year-to-date basis improved from a loss of $133 million to profit of $549 million.

So, although Q3 shows growth rates that reflect a poor base period, the year-to-date view is still an excellent show of strength for the company and the gold sector.


Grindrod’s great run of luck has taken a knock (JSE: GND)

Things are unstable in Mozambique

Grindrod’s investment in the Maputo port has been quite the fairytale, with Transnet as the Fairy Godmother dishing out wonderful sparkles for Grindrod shareholders who have enjoyed a rather crazy world in which companies are finding it easier to export some things via Maputo rather than South African ports.

Cue the ominous music and dark clouds in this story, as Mozambique is dealing with violence in the aftermath of its elections and the border with South Africa has been shut. Rail operations have also been suspended, so Grindrod’s port and terminal operations in Maputo and Matola have also been suspended for now.

The share price dropped 4% on the news. The market is regularly reminded of the risks of seeking growth beyond our borders in Africa.


Lesaka’s first quarter hits the mid-point of guidance for revenue and adjusted EBITDA (JSE: LSK)

This is the ninth successive quarter of delivering adjusted EBITDA guidance

Lesaka is one of the few examples you can find on our local market of a genuine tech start-up. This means a focus on building out platforms and developing the business through smart partnerships, all while working towards that magical inflection point for profitability when red suddenly turns to green and the cash starts flowing.

For now, Lesaka is still making operating losses, although I must point out that the latest quarter included $1.7 million worth of transaction costs for the Adumo acquisition. Without that, the loss of $0.05 million would obviously look a lot better.

Rather than the profits, the one thing I would highlight as a concern is the flat revenue in the Merchant Division. High growth stories need high growth to be justified! The Consumer Division is carrying the full burden right now, with revenue up 30%. Group revenue growth for the quarter was just 7%.

The mid-point of FY25 revenue guidance implies 35% year-on-year growth. Although that seems like a stretch after this quarter, the Adumo acquisition is going to play a major role here and it only closed in October.


The Canal+ deal can’t close quickly enough at MultiChoice (JSE: MCG)

The underlying business is bleeding

MultiChoice has released an interim trading statement that refers to current conditions as the most challenging environment in the group’s history. They find themselves in a difficult spot, navigating African currency issues and a deep, dark hole of investment at Showmax to try build a profitable streaming business. All of this is happening while the core business is coming under increasing threat from the streamers that got there first, like Netflix. At this point, I think the Springboks may well be single-handedly carrying the business thanks to Supersport!

Despite efforts to put through inflationary increases and cut costs, the headline loss per share has gotten a lot worse. It has deteriorated by between 45% and 49%.

MultiChoice then discloses a bunch of other metrics that they would prefer you to use, like “organic trading profit” (a -3% to +1% move) or “organic trading profit excluding Showmax” which increased by between 30% and 34%.

You could also consider adjusted core HEPS, which is expected to be roughly breakeven. This excludes the extensive forex losses on cash remittances from Africa.

If all goes ahead in the Canal+ deal, this will hopefully become their problem to solve. If that deal gets blocked, then I’m genuinely not sure how MultiChoice will manage to fund their Showmax ambitions.


Sappi finishes the year strong (JSE: SAP)

But it wasn’t enough to save the full-year result

Sappi has released fourth quarter and full-year results. Q4 did its very best to improve a tough year, with sales up 6% and adjusted EBITDA up 35%. When you compare it to the full-year result of both sales and adjusted EBITDA down 6%, you realise just how much things improved at the end of the year.

The story is one of better performance in South Africa (especially in pulp) vs. Europe, with Sappi having incurred $158 million in costs to restructure and close European assets. This contributed to the substantial increase in net debt over the 12 months from $1.1 billion to $1.4 billion.

It’s extremely difficult to try and figure out how Sappi might perform in future, as the cyclical nature of the business is made even trickier by how different the underlying paper markets are. The clear theme coming through is that Europe is taking longer than expected to improve, with demand in South Africa and North America currently dominating the story. Still, they expect EBITDA for Q1 2025 to be significantly higher than last year, so the Q4 2024 momentum should continue.


Truworths Africa is in trouble (JSE: TRU)

The share price fell 6% as the market noted the lack of growth

Truworths is not exactly the most innovative retailer around, let’s face it. This is coming through in the performance, with Truworths Africa reporting a very sad sales increase of just 0.2% for the 18 weeks to 3 November. This looks particularly rough vs. the Office UK business, which posted growth of 9.7% in constant currency i.e. that’s not thanks to the rand, for once. In fact, due to rand strength, the growth rate is only 8.1% when translated to rand!

The net impact is that Truworths group sales were up just 2.8% in rand. The company has laid the blame at the door of trading conditions in South Africa. I would wait to see how other retailers are doing before accepting that story at face value. I can’t that Truworths is doing much to improve its competitive positioning.

The bright spot at Truworths Africa is online sales, up 38% and now contributing 6.4% of the segment’s sales. Over at Office, the bright spot is in-store sales, with plans to increase trading space by 10% in the 2025 financial year. Online sales only grew by 3.2% at Office, but that’s a far more mature market for online in which 42.9% of total sales at Office are through online channels.


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • An associate of PJ Mouton bought shares in Curro (JSE: COH) worth over R15 million.
    • A senior executive of Gemfields (JSE: GML) exercised share options and then sold all the shares received for R2.4 million.
    • The CEO of Rainbow Chicken (JSE: RCL) bought shares in the company worth nearly R192k.
  • DRA Global (JSE: DRA) is the next name to be leaving the JSE, with a planned delisting date in early January after shareholders approved the buyback structure that creates a liquidity window prior to the delisting.
  • Bringing to an end many years of legal battles, the court in Brazil has ratified the BHP (JSE: BHG) settlement related to the Samarco dam disaster. The final settlement was $31.7 million, of which BHP is on the hook for half. As I noted when the settlement terms were first announced, the current BHP provision is adequate for this, thanks to the amount spent thus far and the time value of money on the settlement.
  • Equites Property Fund (JSE: EQU) announced that the Basingstoke and Dean Borough Council has granted full planning permission for the development of bulk at Oakdown Farm. There are a number of conditions to be met within the next year, which Equites sounds confident of meeting. This significantly improves the fair value of the property, but Equites carries it at historical cost plus capitalised interest. They therefore won’t recognise the fair value increase, but will continue to capitalise interest. Also be aware that if they sell the property, it would not be included in Equites’ distributable earnings.
  • Kore Potash (JSE: KP2) has issued a trading halt pending the all-important announcement on the EPC contract. This is to avoid any information being leaked into the market and acted upon before being announced. The weird thing is that the halt is only on the ASX and JSE, not the AIM in London!
  • Hammerson (JSE: HMN) has acquired the remaining 50% stake in Westquay, a high quality shopping mall in Southampton in the UK.
  • Jubilee Metals (JSE: JBL) has released a quarterly operational update. It was an important period for them, with plenty of progress made on the Zambian copper strategy in particular. They also achieved a significant uptick in chrome and PGM production in South Africa.
  • Visual International (JSE: VIS) is trying to fix its balance sheet by capitalising a number of loans held by related parties through issuing shares as settlement. The good news for other shareholders is that the shares are being issued at a 25.1% premium to the 30-day VWAP. The other good news is that settling the roughly R29 million in debt will restore the company to a positive net asset value position.
  • African Dawn Capital (JSE: ADW) announced that the suspension of trading on its shares has been lifted.
  • In case you’ve been wondering, there’s still a lot of legal fighting at Tongaat Hulett (JSE: TON). The latest is that an urgent application has been filed in court by RGS Group to try and stop the business rescue plan from being implemented with the Vision consortium.

Who’s doing what this week in the South African M&A space?

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African Infrastructure Investment Managers (Old Mutual) has exited its investment in Bakwena Platinum Corridor Concession. The 12.67% stake, held through its African Infrastructure Investment Fund 2, has been acquired by Gaia Fund Managers, a specialist asset manager focused on Africa’s emerging infrastructure asset class. Financial details were undisclosed.

Nampak has entered into a binding agreement to dispose of its industrial inkjet printing, laser marketing and case coding solutions business known as Nampak I&CS for a disposal consideration of R142,5 million.

Hammerson plc has completed the acquisition of the remaining 50% stake in Westquay in Southampton, UK for £135 million. The consideration will be funded from the proceeds (€705 million) received from the company’s recent disposal of its 42% stake in Value Retail.

Pan African Resources (PAR) is to acquire the remaining 92% shareholding in Tennant Consolidated Mining Group. PAR acquired an initial 8% in March for US$3,4 million and will acquire the rest of the group for $50,8 million in a share-swap transaction which will see an issue of new shares. The new shares constitute less than 6% of its issued share capital. This acquisition aims to boost PAR’s production growth in Australia’s Northern Territory, with plans for a significant processing facility and exploration potential. The initial development capital for Tennant’s Nobles Gold Project is $35,7 million, which will be fully funded using Australian debt facilities. The plant is expected to be commissioned during June 2025 and first gold by July 2025. The initial capital investment is expected to be repaid in less than three years at an average gold price of c.$2,600 an ounce.

Sirius Real Estate is to acquire a £9,05 million multi-let light industrial park in Carnforth, Lancashire representing an 11.4% net initial yield including acquisition costs. The acquisition adds 172,152 square feet of light industrial space to the UK portfolio. In addition, Sirius has completed the €3 million acquisition of a nine-acre strategic land parcel adjacent to its Oberhausen multi-use business park in the Ruhr area of northwest Germany which will provide the opportunity to expand the park.

Anglo American has agreed to the sale of its 33.3% minority interest in the Jellinbah Group, a joint venture that owns a 70% stake in the Jellinbah East and the Lake Vermont steelmaking coal mine in Australia. The stake is being sold to Zashvin, an existing 33.3% shareholder, for cash proceeds of A$1,6 billion.

As part of its ongoing strategy to focus on its mining and chemical businesses and the optimisation of its portfolio, AECI has disposed of Much Asphalt to a consortium comprising Old Mutual Private Equity’s OMPE VI GP (Old Mutual) and Sphere Investments, a Black investment holding company. The estimated disposal consideration of R1,1 billion has been structured as a ‘locked-box’ structure with an effective date of 31 December 2024.

Diversified financial services group Clientèle, has acquired Emerald Life, a life micro-insurer with an established footprint nationwide, for c.R597,5 million. The acquisition will add to the group’s expertise in the mass market segment. The Embedded Value of Emerald Life is c. R600 million. The deal constitutes a category 2 transaction and does not require shareholder approval.

The implementation conditions associated with the disposal by Sasfin Bank of its capital equipment finance and commercial property finance businesses to African Bank have, as of 31 October 2024, been met. The deal was first announced in October 2023 for a disposal consideration of R3,26 billion.

Sabvest Capital’s disposal of its direct and indirect interests in Rolfes, announced in August 2024 for R179,5 million, has received all regulatory approvals and is now unconditional.

The disposal by Transaction Capital of Nutun Transact, Accsys and Nutun Credit Health to Q Link (SPE Mid-Market Fund I Partnership), announced in August 2024, is now unconditional. The deal, a category 2 transaction, was valued at R410 million.

Mpact’s disposal of its Versapak division to Greenpath Recycling (a subsidiary of Sinica Manufacturing) for R254,7 million, announced in August 2024, has become unconditional with effect 4 November 2024.

The Competition Commission has approved the acquisition by Novus from Media24 (Naspers) of three divisions, namely On the Dot – the media supply chain management division, Community Newspapers – the local news portfolio and Soccer Laduma and Kick Off – the football publication division. The purchase consideration was not disclosed but is reported to represent c.1.6% (c.R43 million) of Novus’ market capitalisation.

The proposed joint venture between AngloGold Ashanti and Gold Fields, announced in March 2023, is still to receive the requisite approvals from the Government of Ghana. The joint venture aims to combine Gold Fields’ Tarkwa Mine and AngloGold Ashanti’s Iduapriem Mine into a single managed entity. This would extend life of mine, increase production and lower costs. In the absence of approvals, the mining houses will separately continue to improve their respective assets while maintaining engagement in relation to a potential asset combination.

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