The Public Investment Corporation (PIC) has upped its stake in MultiChoice  to 15.1% on Friday morning.

The owner of DStv and GOtv informed investors that the PIC has acquired an additional interest in the ordinary shares of the company.

The PIC shares in MultiChoice now amounts to 15.1% of the company’s total ordinary shares in issue.

The PIC previously held a 12.25% stake in the company on behalf of pensioners.

“As required in terms of section 122(3)(a) of the Act, MultiChoice has filed the required notice with
the Takeover Regulation Panel,” MultIchoice said in a statement.

“The board of directors of MultiChoice accepts responsibility for the information contained in this announcement as it relates to the company and confirms that, to the best of its knowledge and belief, such information relating to the company is true and that this announcement does not omit anything likely to affect the importance of such information.”

Also read: GUGU LOURIE: Is shareholder activism dead at the PIC?

Should the hard-earned money of pensioners, teachers, police officers and other government employees remain locked in shares at MultiChoice?

Why should public pension funds, particularly those managed by the Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF) through the Public Investment Corporation (PIC), be concerned about the ownership of MultiChoice?

After all, the main concern for such funds is earning dividends for their members.

With French media company Canal+ making hostile moves to buy controlling shares in MultiChoice, all eyes are on institutional shareholders, including the PIC, who are holding out for a better offer.

Do fund members care about the possible hostile takeover?

To find out, I turned to my pensioner father whose retirement funds are under the management of the GEPF via the PIC.

“Papa, are you content with seeing your pension funds invested in MultiChoice?” I asked. “What is MultiChoice?” my father responded with curiosity.

Also read: GUGU LOURIE: MultiChoice better off pursuing its strategy without Canal+

Multichoice CEO Calvo Mawela

French media company Canal+ is determined to buy the remaining shares in MultiChoice it does not already own, a move that places DStv in a spot of bother. MultiChoice owns DStv.

MultiChoices’ management, led by Calvo Mawela, now faces the reality that the French company’s bid has effectively become an attempt at a hostile takeover.

It can’t be business as usual at the MultiChoice offices in Randburg and Dubai.

Undeterred by the rejection, Canal+ — already the largest MultiChoice shareholder — raised its stake to 35.01%, prompting a mandatory offer to shareholders and effectively initiating a hostile takeover. Given that the board turned down a previous offer by the French company to buy controlling shares, the priority for MultiChoice has to be fending off Canal+.

This simply means the focus has inevitably been shifted away from the well-articulated MultiChoice platform-led strategy focused on being top of choice for African households, enriching their lives by delivering entertainment and relevant consumer services through technology.

While I believe this is a good expansion strategy, MultiChoice management is at the moment seized with the Canal+ matter.

Africa’s biggest pay TV operator is growing M-Net, SuperSport, DStv and GoTV platforms across the continent. It is already in partnership with Comcast, the US media and telecommunications conglomerate that owns the UK’s Sky Group and US broadcaster NBCUniversal.

 

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