Audio By Carbonatix
South Africa is investigating a 9 billion rand ($629 million) loan made by the Public Investment Corp. to a black empowerment partner of embattled retailer Steinhoff International Holdings NV, according to people familiar with the matter.
The probe will seek clarity on why Africa’s largest money manager decided to later sell its collateral on the loan to Citigroup Inc., said the people, who asked not to be identified as the details are private.
The result was that the PIC was among those that lost heavily from Steinhoff’s share price collapse in the wake of an accounting scandal a year ago.
President Cyril Ramaphosa ordered a commission to investigate a number of investment decisions made by the PIC, which has more than 2 trillion rand under management and is the administrator of state-worker pension funds.
Allegations surrounding some deals led to the resignation of Chief Executive Officer Daniel Matjila last month.
The Government Employees Pension Fund, whose funds are administered by the PIC, has written off a 4.3 billion rand investment in Lancaster, according to the people familiar with the matter.
“The commission of inquiry is running its own processes and the PIC is careful not to interfere with the commission’s work,” the PIC said in an emailed response to questions. Citigroup declined to comment.
“I assume this is one of the investments that the PIC made that will get attention at the inquiry as it was a big investment, rather than a specific probe into this matter,” said Jayendra Naidoo, founder of Lancaster.
Plunging Shares
Steinhoff, like many South African companies, sought to sell a stake to a black-owned partner as the government pressures businesses to make up for discrimination during apartheid. The probe into the PIC loan to Lancaster was first reported by Johannesburg’s Business Day newspaper.
Lancaster took out loans to buy shares in Steinhoff to take part in the 2017 spin off of the retailer’s African operations, now known as Pepkor Holdings Ltd, said the people. Naidoo is chairman of Pepkor.
Steinhoff shares are down almost 97 percent since the owner of Conforama in France and Mattress Firm in the U.S. announced accounting irregularities and the departure of its CEO in December 2017. The company is being sued by a number of investors, most notably former chairman and billionaire Christo Wiese.
Latest Stories
-
2026 World Cup: What would Ghana lose without Thomas Partey against Panama?
1 hour -
Confidence high as Vice President visits Black Stars ahead of Panama showdown
3 hours -
BECE 2026: Five important steps JHS graduates should take before starting SHS
3 hours -
2026 World Cup: Ghana fails in bid to have Partey’s Canada visa denial overturned
3 hours -
University of Nottingham cyberattack triggers CSA warning to Ghanaian universities
3 hours -
Ghana-South Africa Business Chamber condemns xenophobic attacks on Ghanaians
3 hours -
“US Justice Department hasn’t gotten back to Ghana that it has served Ofori-Atta” – OSP
3 hours -
Deputy Energy Minister reaffirms Ghana’s commitment to gas-led development at West Africa Gas Summit
4 hours -
Protect Ghanaians in South Africa through diplomacy – Bosome Freho MP to gov’t
4 hours -
About 49,000 Ghanaians still live in South Africa – Bosome Freho MP discloses
4 hours -
Bosome Freho MP urges South Africa to take decisive action against Xenophobic attacks
4 hours -
Mfantsipim SHS final-year student commits suicide
4 hours -
Complete Farmer launches CF Grower and CF Buyer to deepen digital agriculture in Ghana
4 hours -
Nukunu Sports Academy to support young football enthusiast until he turns 14
4 hours -
With green card, Ofori-Atta has far more protection than he had previously – Kpebu
4 hours