Telkom said government is considering various options regarding its 39% stake in the fixed-line operator as it seeks to raise cash to bail out the country’s unprofitable national airline.
The state’s shares in the former telecommunications monopoly are worth about R13bn. Lawmakers are in talks with government-owned companies including the Industrial Development Corp and the Public Investment Corp to buy as much as 28% of the company, people familiar with the matter said last week. It could sell the whole stake if the situation at South African Airways worsens, they said.
Telkom shares rose 3.1% to R63.09 as of 10.49am in Johannesburg, paring the decline this year to 15%. The government’s proposal “may have a material effect on Telkom’s share price”, the Pretoria-based company said in a statement on Wednesday.
The decision to bail out SAA was made as the carrier has R6.9bn of debt due at end of September. Of that sum, Citigroup has said it won’t extend the repayment deadline for a R1.5bn loan, echoing a similar move by Standard Chartered last month. The debt-laden airline has failed to make a profit since 2011 and has struggled to control costs.
The sale of at least part of its stake in Telkom would be the second time in three years that the government has opted to sell shares in listed stocks to put cash into state companies. In 2015, the administration of President Jacob Zuma disposed of a R28.7bn stake in Vodacom to raise funds for utility Eskom, which was struggling financially amid a nationwide electricity shortage. The buyer in that case was the PIC, Africa’s biggest money manager with almost R1.9 trillion in assets.
The value of the government’s Telkom stake has risen 217% over the past five years as CEO Sipho Maseko turned around the company by cutting jobs and investing in a wireless business. In that time, the CEO has returned the operator to profit and reinstated the dividend. Telkom agreed to buy IT provider Business Connexion, now rebranded as BCX, in 2014 to expand its corporate division.
Finance minister Malusi Gigaba is due to present options to the cabinet on the way forward for SAA by the end of September. The airline needs a R10bn recapitalisation as well as a strategic equity partner, he said on 25 August. — Reported by Loni Prinsloo and Janice Kew, with assistance from Renee Bonorchis and Arabile Gumede, (c) 2017 Bloomberg LP