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When state-owned entities are no longer public companies, what are the rules?

A number of South Africa’s state-owned enterprises (SOEs) have a long history of battling issues such as poor management and high levels of debt that have put a substantial strain on the country’s national budget.

This is particularly true for SOEs that have had to rely on government bailouts to keep afloat. The government has been resolutely looking for ways to alleviate the financial burden of many SOEs and turn their situations around.

For South African Airways (SAA), the government’s strategy is to sell a 51% stake in the struggling airline to the Takatso Consortium. This is geared to help the enterprise recover from years of debt as well as the negative impact of Covid-19 which has affected airline operations due to travel restrictions.

This means the Takatso Consortium will take a controlling shareholding stake of the airline and the South African government has now become a minority shareholder.

However, this decision introduces a number of considerations for SOEs in the future.

While the situation with SAA is unusual, it could become more common among other SOEs if it proves to work in rectifying the financial challenges of the national airline.

SAA sale sets off a storm of controversy

So what happens when a company formerly owned by the state becomes majority-owned by a private shareholder, and the government becomes a minority shareholder?

Three key questions

This novel situation raises three key questions around the running and regulation of entities that were publicly owned and are now privately run.

  • How do shareholders work together in this new private-public dynamic?

As government disposes of its shares in a public enterprise, new, private shareholders will enter into the business. When this happens, the government will need to contract with those shareholders as a private company would, by entering into a shareholders’ agreement that will dictate how the company is run, what the company can and cannot do, and what actions will require a higher threshold of voting (referred to as minority protections).

Essentially, a well-drafted shareholders’ agreement will lay out the duties and obligations of shareholders, determine how decisions will be made at a shareholder level, address existing and future shareholder funding, and set out a procedure for dispute resolution as well as the process for the exiting of shareholders from the company.

As there is no precedent or piece of legislation that governs how private and public shareholders will run a company together, this introduces an interesting scenario for public-private partnerships in the future with shareholder matters needing to be determined on a case-by-case basis.

  • How will competition be protected in this new entity?

When a private company disposes of a majority stake in the business, the value of a proposed merger equals or exceeds R600 million, or the combined annual turnover or assets of both the firms are valued at or above R6.6 billion, the Competition Act dictates that a merger filing must be made with the Competition Commission (CompCom) as there will be a change of control in the business.

This is to ensure that market participants in the merger are not decreasing competition by doing so, that there is no abuse of a dominant position by a firm that could lead to excessive or discriminatory pricing, and that a firm is not denying competitors access to essential facilities, as well as any other exclusionary acts.

With an already unclear competition policy on SOEs, this situation presents new questions around the protection, promotion, and maintenance of competition in South Africa’s economy.

The CompCom is an independent, statutory body, but perceptions may exist that it is also a government entity.

It will therefore attract scrutiny to ensure that it makes decisions around these mixed enterprises fairly and in an unbiased manner.

When the CompCom approves mergers it often stipulates conditions to such approval.

Will, for instance, the commission therefore require the government to dispose of any other assets before allowing the disposal of its majority shares in an SOE, as it would sometimes require for any other private business?

Will it ensure that the government doesn’t abuse its dominance in the various sectors it has major stakes in?

Competition regulation around both SOEs and new formerly state-controlled enterprises needs to be made clearer as soon as possible to address transparency in pricing, cross-subsidisation and bailouts.

  • How will government deal with shareholder funding?

Most companies have three sources of funding: the money the company makes and keeps in the bank, shareholder funds, and commercial funding. When a company needs to secure funding there is often an agreed-to sequence that must be followed, usually set out in either the shareholders’ agreement or the company’s Memorandum of Incorporation. For instance, when the business needs money it should first look in its own pockets (the money it makes); then go to the shareholders; and then, if the shareholders can’t fund the business, it must look for funding in the market.

When government is in a position such as that presented by SAA, how, as a minority shareholder, will it continue to fund the enterprise and not have to write any more guarantees to save the SOE – particularly as it will have sold its shares in order to get out of debt?

With the announcement of the majority stake sale to Takatso, the South African government noted that it would no longer provide any funding to the airline. But all stakeholders of a business are required to fund the company – you don’t just own the business; it is one of your responsibilities as a shareholder to put money into the company when needed. If not, non-funding shareholders may get their shareholding diluted in favour of those shareholders who provide the required funding.

So is the government, as a minority shareholder, still liable to fund the company using taxpayers’ money, and is it willing to put its hands back into its pockets and continue funding the entity?

If so, how will the decision to sell a majority stake in an SOE to a private business help the government in moving away from having to bail out SOEs from its financial struggles?

Additionally, when an SOE is no longer a public entity, it is no longer shackled by the Public Finance Management Act, which sets out a number of compliance measures for public enterprises to adhere to, leaving these new mixed entities with a bit of regulatory breathing room.

So what does it mean for government to have a stake in these entities, and how can it ensure that it is not just perpetuating what it has had to do for years (continue to pour money into businesses that aren’t making money) by retaining a portion of its control?

If the South African government’s decision to sell a major stake in SAA becomes a trend among SOEs, we will need new rules set out to govern these new entities in order to ensure that the interests of both private companies and the public are protected.

Listen to Ryk van Niekerk’s interview with Takatso CEO Gidon Novick (or read the transcript here):

(This interview was conducted and transcribed in English but aired on RSG Geldsake.)

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