At the implementation of Mara Phones, the total funding for this project which was intended to create 450 jobs over five years stood at R492 million.
As a senior lender, the Industrial Development Coporation approved total facilities amounting to R238 million.
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The IDC is funded through:
1) Divestment from mature investments Internal profits
2) Borrowing in domestic and
international markets.
3) Internal profits
The IDC uses the above monies to provides funding to businesses in the form of loans and equity investments.
What are some of the revenue drivers of the IDC?
1) From the loan funding, the IDC derives income from;
Interest payments and
Capital repayments.
2) From the equity funding, the IDC derives income in the form of;
Dividend receipts and
Capital growth and realisation.
Funding to clients by the IDC can be structured in a number of ways such as;
Debt,
Equity and Quasi-Equity,
Guarantees,
Trade Finance and
Venture Capital.
The Industrial Development Corporation (IDC) enjoyed a ~5.4% ⬆️ in revenue, from R16.2 billion in FY20 to R17.1 billion for FY21.
The IDC stated that the 5.4% increase in revenue is more than the current inflation of ~4.2% and was mainly from dividends and interest income.
Mara Phones South Africa (Pty) Ltd, is part of the global Mara Corporation and domiciled in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Ashish J. Thakkar is the Founder of Mara Group.
Mara is an African group with operations in technology, banking, real estate and infrastructure.
Apparently when Ashish J. Thakkar was 15 years old, he told his parents that he wanted to leave his school in Uganda to build a business.
His family gave him a $5,000 loan.
In addition to the South Africa operation, Mara Corporation has a similar smartphone production facility in Rwanda.
It launched its operations in South Africa in 2019 after which it established a state-of-the-art manufacturing plant in the Dube Trade Port, Kwa-Zulu Natal.
In 2018, Mara’s CEO Ashish Thakkar pledged R1.5 billion to build South Africa's first high-tech smartphone plant at the Dube Trade Port outside Durban and associated retail infrastructure during President Cyril Ramaphosa's investment summit which he delivered in 2019.
In 2019 the Mara Phones KZN facility had over 200 youth employees and of them, 67% were women and 94% of them were unemployed but skilled.
Mara was well on its way to reach its target of employing 450 South Africans by 2024.
President Cyril Ramaphosa attended the grand opening.
Mara Phones received preferential brand status in SA govt's RT15-2021 communications contract meaning that state organs had to give preference to Mara’s phones if their employees wanted to take out a package until 2026.
This meant that government was the single biggest off taker
2020 came and COVID-19 followed together with the hard lockdowns.
Production at the KZN facility which had commenced in October 2019 was disrupted owing to the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic. Consequently, the production volumes were impacted and were below target.
Total funding for the Mara KZN project stood at R492m with the IDC being the senior lender approved total facilities amounting to R238m.
Shortfall=R254m
Mara Phones shareholders were not able to raise their full contribution.
As such, shortfall was provided by Standard Bank.
IDC has established that in the absence of further capitalisation of Mara Phones, there is no case to be made to inject further debt funding into the company.
The Mara Phones KZN facility will be auctioned.
The IDC’s non-performing loans ratio ⬆️ from 26% in 2019/20
to 38% in 2020/21.
The IDC pre-empted this outcome as a consequence of the pandemic.
The expected credit losses ratio weakened from 32% at the end of FY20 to 37% at the end of FY21.
The IDC writes off investments when all avenues of recovery have been exhausted.
In FY21, R255 million worth of investments were written off vs R2.4 billion in FY20.
The write-offs were provided
for partially through impairments, cushioning the impact on the balance sheet.
Auction of the Mara facility in KZN is taking place end of Feb.
A lot of questions are being asked such as
Why the rush by the lenders to recover the monies?
If the business case was solid (govt as off-taker) why don't the lenders carry on with operations?
Aston Martin launched their 2022 F1 car on 10 Feb 2022 and they have one of the longest F1 team names which is Aston Martin Aramco Cognizant Formula One™ Team.
Aston Martin was absent from F1 for 60 years until they made a return in 2021.
How did they make a return?
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Oct 2018, Aston Martin listed on the London Stock Exchange at £19 per share valuing the company at £4.33 billion.
Aston Martin had been fighting a huge debt pile.
Proceeds from the listing helped somewhat to pay down the debt pile.
Now how did Aston Martin return to F1?
Barely 2yrs post listing (31 Jan 2020), Aston Martin Lagonda Global announced its intention to strengthen its balance sheet to necessarily and immediately improve
liquidity and reduce leverage.
Forbes and Magnum Opus Acquisition (a publicly-traded special purpose acquisition company) announced a $200 million strategic investment from Binance, one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency and blockchain infrastructure providers.
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Forbes has been seeking $400mn of additional capital through a private placement as part of its plans to list in New York via a merger with special purpose acquisition company Magnum Opus Acquisition Limited.
Binance’s strategic investment will be through Binance’s assumption of subscription agreements representing $200 million of commitments in the $400 million private investment in public equity.
Transnet has concluded its deal roadshow and bond auction by adding more debt on the balance sheet.
Transnet raised R2.02bn of senior unsecured notes ranging from a tenor of 1-12 years.
Auction was well received and achieved an order book of R2.57 billion (1.28x subscribed).
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Transnet went on an investor deal roadshow hoping to raise funds from the domestic debt capital market to create a liquidity headroom of R5bn-R7bn over next 12-18 months.
Only R3,5bn of Transnet’s total debt is supported by government guarantees and dates back to the 1999 FY.
You have a liquidity issue that is weighing heavily on your balance sheet and you default solution is to add more expensive debt to the balance sheet as a way to resolve that issue.
MC Mining is having a busy month in the capital raising front.
1) MC Mining has raised R84m staged in two tranches and
2) the Industrial Development Coporation (IDC) has extended the date for repayment of a R160m loan payable by MC Mining.
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MC Mining is a coal exploration mining company.
MC Mining’s key projects include the Uitkomst Collier (metallurgical and thermal coal), Makhado Project (hard coking coal), Vele Colliery
(semi-soft coking and thermal coal), and the Soutpansberg Projects (coking and thermal coal).
MC Mining entered into a
staged R86,036,691 Convertible Advance and Subscription Agreement with South African based mining group, Senosi Group Investment Holdings Proprietary Limited (Senosi) .
Foreign Direct Investment flows to South Africa increased to $41 billion in 2021 from $3 billion in 2020 largely driven by the share swap between Naspers and ita majority-owned subsidiary Prosus.
Who is Prosus and why did Naspers embark on the share swap?
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When Naspers coughs, the entire JSE catches a cold.
The JSE had record trading volumes on 17 Aug 2021 and of the R148bn traded, Naspers and Prosus accounted for R125bn in value.
Naspers’s size on the JSE was 25.9% the JSE Shareholder Weighted Index in 2019 and 23.3% in 2021.
In 2019, Naspers decided to unbundle all of its internet interests outside of South Africa including the famous Tencent stake into a new company which was called Prosus.
Prosus got a primary listing on Euronext Amsterdam and a secondary listing on the JSE.