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    TechCentralTechCentral
    Home » Investment » Naspers at pains to show it’s not abandoning SA

    Naspers at pains to show it’s not abandoning SA

    By Loni Prinsloo29 May 2019
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    Bob van Dijk

    Naspers may be moving most of its Internet businesses to a new listing in Amsterdam, but the Cape Town-based technology investor is at pains to show it’s not abandoning South Africa.

    The creation of the still generically named NewCo Group will hold such crown jewels as Naspers’s 31% stake in Chinese Web giant Tencent — now worth US$121-billion. Left behind in South Africa will be the media assets that Naspers has long made clear are not a priority — plus local online ventures Takealot and Property24.

    That looks like a bad deal for some local investors, who may feel some of their wealth is being taken to where it could be heavily taxed, according to Naspers CEO Bob van Dijk. Rather than anger the people who backed the company on its way to becoming a $94-billion behemoth, Naspers is giving NewCo a secondary listing in Johannesburg and arranging a way to make the spin out more tax-efficient.

    We did not want to force or inconvenience some of our other shareholders that would have to pay immediate capital gains tax with the new listing

    “We did not want to force or inconvenience some of our other shareholders that would have to pay immediate capital gains tax with the new listing,” the CEO said by phone. “We decided to do a cash issuance that will give the investors the options to take Naspers or NewCo shares.”

    The Johannesburg secondary listing is another clear concession to those that fear the departure of South Africa’s biggest corporate success story — and cash cow for investors. The move will allow local institutions to work around restrictions on owning foreign shares, Van Dijk said.

    “They would be able to hold NewCo as a domestic stock,” he said.

    Unavoidable

    The reality is that some sort of Naspers breakup has become unavoidable. The company is so big that it makes up almost 25% of Johannesburg’s All-Share Index, compared to 5% in 2013. That’s forced some investors to sell the stock to keep within investment rules regarding exposure to a single company. In short: Naspers needs a second home.

    Naspers will be a 73% majority shareholder in NewCo and will honour last year’s pledge to invest R3.2-billion in existing South African businesses, the company said in a statement on Wednesday. The firm will also invest in the local tech startup sector, it added.  — (c) 2019 Bloomberg LP



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