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JSE lifts Delta’s suspension

• Earlier move was prompted by company’s withdrawal of its 2020 results after forensic investigation uncovered irregular payments and procurement

Alistair Anderson Property Writer andersona@businesslive.co.za

The JSE has lifted the listing suspension of the government’s largest listed landlord, Delta Property Fund. The real estate investment trust had withdrawn financial results in the past, which had led to its suspension on December 15 2020. But in June it released financial results for the year to end-February.

The JSE has lifted the listing suspension of the government’s largest listed landlord, Delta Property Fund.

The real estate investment trust (Reit) withdrew financial results in the past, which led to its suspension on December 15 2020. But in June it posted financial results for the year to end-February. In a statement via the JSE’s stock exchange news service on Thursday, the company said: “The JSE has concluded its review of all the matters it considered to be relevant to the JSE’s decision to lift the suspension.”

These included the company publishing its financial results for the year to end-February 2021, and the interim period to end August 2020. It also reissued and restated financial statements for the year to ended February 2020.

Delta had withdrawn previously published financial results for the year to end-February 2020, which was the reason for its suspension.

The company’s auditor, BDO SA, had issued qualified opinions in relation to the results.

Delta has been through a turbulent year in which founder and former CEO Sandile Nomvete quit after allegations of fraud, along with the rest of the company’s management team.

The company, which generates about 80% of its revenue from government tenants, has battled through the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.

In the year to end-February 2021, the value of Delta’s property portfolio fell 6.8% from R8.8bn to R8.2bn. The reduction in valuations was mainly the result of increased vacancies and a short average lease profile of 15 months on the portfolio.

Delta said on Thursday that the basis for BDO’s qualified opinions in its financial results was that, as a result of a lack of shareholding information for the companies with which Delta transacted, BDO was unable to satisfy itself regarding the completeness of related party transactions and balances. “Matters might have come to BDO’s attention indicating that adjustments might have been necessary to the relevant notes to the results,” Delta said.

“Delta has further confirmed to the JSE that the company was unable to obtain the shareholding information of the entities referred to above, as these are private companies. Procurement processes have been amended to deal only with companies that provide all information,” it said.

Delta originally withdrew its financial results for the year to February 2020 in December 2020 after it announced the outcome of a forensic investigation into its finances, which uncovered irregular payments and procurement by its previous management. Nomvete and CFO Shaneel Maharaj resigned and left in August 2020. COO Otis Tshabalala also left the company later.

The former executives said in April 2021 that they had followed governance procedures and that at the time of their departure the company’s board had not alleged wrongdoing, accepting that they left to allow the new leadership the space to drive a revised strategy.

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2021-07-30T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-30T07:00:00.0000000Z

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