South African hotelier Sun International exists Nigeria due to weak econony, arrests of employees by EFCC & other factors
Read the report from
Bloomberg below...
Sun International Ltd. plans to exit Nigeria after the South African
casino and hotel operator’s earnings in the country plunged amid a
weakening economy and a dispute involving the company’s local partners.
Sun International bought 49 percent of the Nigerian
Stock Exchange-listed Tourist Company of Nigeria 10 years ago, giving it
part-ownership of the Federal Palace hotel in Lagos, one of the main
hotels used by businessmen traveling to the commercial capital.
Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization at the
Nigerian operations fell 58 percent in the 12 months through June, Sun
said in a statement on Monday. Occupancy rates at the property fell to
42 percent.
"The Federal Palace continues to operate in a difficult environment with
the Nigerian economy facing a number of crises including the low oil
price,” the Johannesburg-based company said in the statement. The
Islamist insurgency led by the Boko Haram group and a weakening naira
also hurt trading, while an “ongoing shareholder dispute has frustrated
all attempts to develop and improve the property,” the company said.
Other South African companies to have left Nigeria include retailers
Woolworths Holdings Ltd. and Truworths International Ltd., citing tough
regulation and rising costs. Johannesburg-based MTN Group Ltd., Africa’s
biggest mobile-phone provider, agreed to pay a 330 billion naira ($957
million) regulatory fine in the country earlier this year, leading to
its first-ever half-year loss.
Sun has been drawn into a “long-standing family dispute” between fellow
shareholders in Nigeria, the company said earlier this year, after
workers, including South African expatriates, were detained without
charges by Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crime Commission.
The employees have still not had their passports returned to them, while
no charges have been laid against them or the company, Sun said on
Monday.
The process of exiting Nigeria is likely to be “protracted,” as Sun
seeks to ensure it receives fair value for the investment, the company
said.
The hotelier said in May it plans to sell minority interests in
properties in countries including Zambia, Botswana and Namibia for 394
million rand ($29 million) to reduce debt.
The shares were 0.4 percent lower at 91.76 rand as of 2:02 p.m. in
Johannesburg, valuing the company at 10 billion rand.
Sun, owner of the Sun City resort northwest of Johannesburg, said
full-year diluted adjusted earnings per share excluding one-time items
fell 20 percent to 6.28 rand, while sales gained 15 percent to 12.2
billion rand. The final dividend was cut to 1.35 rand a share from 1.75
rand the previous year.
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