Spinoffs drive JSE listings as valuations spur on sellers

By Neo Khanyile

(Bloomberg) – South Africa’s main stock exchange may witness the most new listings for at least two years in 2017, helped by a spate of spinoffs as owners look to tap a market trading near record highs.

People walk near the reception at the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) in Sandton. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

Of the 18 debuts this year, six are carved out of other companies, most of which are publicly traded. A further four new arrivals are backed by collections of investment holdings, rather than providing a direct bet on any single business.

“It’s simply a function of trying to crystallize value with the high valuations that the companies are seeing,” said Grant Cullens, who helps oversee $1.3bn as chief executive officer of African Alliance Asset Management in Johannesburg. “It’s better to do that when the market is up here, rather than when it’s down 200 or 300 points lower.”

South Africa’s benchmark stock index gained 0.1 percent to 58,000.36 by 9:15 a.m. in Johannesburg Monday. It has clocked eight records in October, shaking off the restraints of weak economic growth and a divisive leadership contest within the ruling African National Congress. With the final quarter traditionally a busy one for new listings, the exchange expects more companies to seek to make the most of the biggest stock gains since 2013.

“If you ask me what the common theme is, if you further analyse the listings for this year, I would say it would definitely be the spinoffs,” said Patrycja Kula-Verster, business development manager in the primary markets division at JSE Ltd., operator of the bourse.

Listings are proving a popular alternative to tapping private equity for companies seeking funds, Kula-Verster said in an interview. It’s a step that can provide a permanent source of capital, without the defined time horizons that accompany private equity deals, while also offering scope for follow-on raisings, she said.

This year’s spinoffs that now trade on the exchange:

Premier Fishing & Brands Ltd., unbundled from African Equity Empowerment Investments, in March Sea Harvest Group Ltd., spun off from Brimstone Investment Corp., in March Master Plastics Ltd., unbundled from Astrapak Ltd., in May Kaap Agri Ltd. spun off from unlisted holding company Kaap Agri Bedryf Ltd., in June Steinhoff Africa Retail Ltd, unbundled from Steinhoff International Holdings NV, in September Stadio Holdings, spun off from Curro Holdings Group Ltd., in October

Investment holding and special purpose acquisition company listings in 2017:

Long4Life Ltd., in April RH Bophelo Ltd., in May African Rainbow Capital Investments Ltd., in September Brainworks Ltd., in October

4Sight Holdings Ltd., which also houses investments, marked the 18th listing on the exchange on October 19, two days after the benchmark set its latest record high. The positive sentiment suggests this is a good time to come to market, said African Alliance’s Cullens.

“And why wouldn’t you? Because you don’t really know how much longer it’s going to last,” he said.

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