Selling Telecel won’t sail smooth. Mutasa opposes it. Shareholding one big mess

L.S.M Kabweza Avatar

Won't stop tormenting you until you apologise So yesterday’s news about Brainworks offering to buy 40% of Telecel Zimbabwe was much welcome news. The market needs a thriving Telecel, so this glimmer of hope in something potentially ending the impasse and albatross around the company’s neck for years now, is easily overrated. The truth is that Telecel’s shareholding is a mess.

So anyway, the news today is that Jane Mutasa, co-owner of Empowerment Corporation (EC) via her company Selpon Investments, won’t have any of this selling business, at least, apparently, until she gets more shareholding in EC. Jane Mutasa has for a while now been accusing James Makamba, or ‘stealing’ EC shares. Makamba currently owns 75% of EC, shareholding his fellow ’empowerment’ opportunists disputes.

Mutasa’s move now is to block an EC extraordinary meeting scheduled for the 20th of February. Mutasa’s own shareholding is, by the way, itself disputed by Leo Mugabe and other ‘former’ EC members who also accuse her of stealing shares by transferring them into her own company. When EC was formed, back in 1996, Jane Mutasa was only involved as the founder of a women’s empowerment group called Indigenous Business Women Organisation. Somewhere along the way, IBWO got out of the picture and in came her own private company, Selpon.

So, yes. One big mess.

All this just means back to business as usual shareholder bickering for Telecel. The Brainworks offer is nothing to smile about. Yet.

As one commentator on yesterday’s article pointed out:
I fail to see how EC could be proposing a sell-off to a new investor when disputes remain over the EC stockholding. I think this will only be another drawn-out war that Telecel doesn’t really need. Besides the valuation itself, there’s no consensus on who owns what of EC. So…

Maybe POTRAZ needs to pull that license so everyone can get serious, come to the table and resolve this once and for all. if the existence of what they fight for is threatened, maybe big picture thinking will come back. Assuming of course it was ever there.

3 comments

  1. mishelyn

    the combi picture says it all not only about telecel but zim at large

    1. L.S.M Kabweza

      +1

  2. Adala

    Brainworks is offering to acquire the entire 40% local shareholding held by the Empowerment Corporation (EC) implying it will mop up all EC shares. Of course, this is no news since the compliance issues pertaining to
    indigenisation and license renewal remain unresolved. However, if one looks at it objectively, then it suffices to say that a new shareholder such as
    Brainworks may unlock avenues of opportunity for new investors since no one was interested in dealing with the lunatics and cash strapped politicians-cum-businessmen at EC. Wait a minute….. I smell a rat with this deal. Telecel is definitely being grossly undervalued with this so-called mega transaction to acquire all EC shares (40%) for only $20 million with this transaction being consummated at the local level. The company is understood to be worth about $150M plus. Brainworks, for all practical purposes, does not have the requisite managerial capability and the financial capacity to restructure, fund and unlock value for Telecel in this highly competitive, technologically dynamic and capital intensive telecoms environment. It therefore needs to solicit for a technical partner of the scope, breadth and strength of the likes of MTN, Vodacom, Millicon, Airtel, etc. But again, this is a non-starter due to the “political expedience” factor. Simply put, this transaction is basically to facilitate money to be transferred elsewhere. We are not naive to believe that this is part of the empowerment process. Nothing has changed at Telecel. The foreign shareholders still own 60% equity as of today and the status quo remains at 60/40 with no solution in sight for the capitalization imperative of the company any time soon.

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