Naspers Considers `Structural Options' to Reduce Discount

Naspers Could Consider `Structural Options' to Reduce Discount

(Bloomberg) -- Naspers Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Bob Van Dijk said Africa’s largest company will consider “structural options” if the gap with its stake in Tencent Holdings Ltd. persists.

Naspers has a 33 percent stake in Shenzhen, China-based internet giant Tencent, d at about $158 billion, while Naspers itself has a market of about $112 billion. The discount is “too high,” and has been accelerating in the past 20 months, Van Dijk said Tuesday in New York. Leaving aside Tencent, analysts place Naspers’ asset at more than $180 billion, said Chief Financial Officer Basil Sgourdos.

Africa’s largest company by market is considering using tools such as depositary receipts to access new pools of capital that are otherwise restricted to trade on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, Sgourdos at the investor presentation. Naspers will also consider listing some underlying businesses to unlock further , he said.

In October, veteran emerging-markets investor Mark Mobius said it should buy back Naspers stock. While repurchases could make sense when the company has more financial flexibility, right now it is focused on spending on expanding its businesses and on acquisitions, Sgourdos said.

Capital Outflows

The gap with Tencent has widened in line with capital outflows from South Africa, where Naspers has its primary listing, Van Dijk said. It will be close to “impossible” for Naspers to move its listing from the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, which has also been protecting the company from hostile takeovers, he said.

Van Dijk has resisted pressure to sell Naspers’ holding in Tencent, a suggestion that has surfaced over the years. 

The Cape Town-based company, which also owns Africa’s largest pay-TV business and newspapers, has been focusing on e-commerce and is now among the world’s largest investors in the space, backing ventures from Mail.Ru Group Ltd. in Russia to iFood in Brazil.

Naspers plans to accelerate the “path to profitability” of its e-commerce businesses and sees potential for initial public offerings of companies in its portfolio, Van Dijk said. The company could become purely focused on internet businesses, which now make up about 77 percent of revenues, “quite quickly,” he said. 

“I do not think five years from now people will be picking up newspapers anymore or watching linear TV,” Van Dijk said. The company is looking at the digitalization of these more traditional business units over the next two years.

The stock rallied 74 percent this year, the top performer among South Africa’s 40 biggest and most liquid stocks. Tencent surged 109 percent in 2017, outperforming the average 32 percent gain in the Hang Seng Index.

©2017 Bloomberg L.P.

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