Short-seller Viceroy says that it has submitted names and evidence of Capitecโs questionable loan practices to South Africaโs finance committee โ including the questions it says the bank refuses to answer.
The groupโs latest move follows at leastย two prior reportsย on Capitecย in as many months, in which it accuses it of being a loan shark and trying to hide the risks of its loan book from investors through clever accounting.
Viceroy โ which makes money by shorting a companyโs stock and then releasing damning reports on those groups โ first published a report in late January claiming that Capitec was โcleaningโ its loan customers by immediately granting loans to clients who had taken out other loans to repay their previous Capitec loans, without a โcool downโ period.
This, the research group said, made Capitecโs loan books look healthier than they are in reality, while effectively โhidingโ the risks of default from its client base. It also accused Capitec of manipulating debt orders so that Capitec loans were paid off first, exacerbating strained financial positions of customers.
It declared Capitec โuninvestableโ, and called for the bank to be put under curatorship and a formal investigation to be launched.
For its part, Capitec has consistently denied Viceroyโs claims, saying that the firm did not understand how its business operated. It providedย detailed responsesย to the allegations, and invited Viceroy toย meet with the bankโs managementย to get a better idea of what was going on.
The bank was also backed by ratings agencies, the South African Reserve Bank and the National Credit Regulator.
However, Viceroy maintains that theย authorities got it wrong.
The short-seller now claims that its engagements with Capitec have proven fruitless, saying that Capitec has failed to answer any of its questions, and has instead chosen to be evasive and tangential with the data it did provide.
The group said it was a perfect example of why it did not want to engage with Capitec management in the first place โ because they simply do not answer questions.
โViceroy has been criticised for not engaging with management prior to publication of our reports. Capitecโs response is a prime example of why we choose not to.
โWe maintain our recommendation that Capitec should be subject to an external, independent regulatory investigation, which we believe will result in Capitec being placed in curatorship to protect its consumers,โ the group said.
Viceroy said it sent Capitec eight very specific questions, and received eight vague answers โ all of which can be read inย Viceroyโs latest document.
โAs the bank has failed to answer our questions, we reassert our opinion that Capitec Bank is fundamentally uninvestable and await the findings of a formal investigation,โ the group said.
โWe look forward to presenting to parliament on Capitec, including debt counsellor data. Analysts would be wise to deep dive before dismissing our research.โ
Capitec is currently in a closed period ahead of its annual results, and has not yet responded to Viceroyโs latest volley. The group previously warned shareholders that Viceroyโs attack on its business would continue for some time.
On Wednesday, the groupโs share price traded 1.4% down, to R854.92 โ still off from the highs seen before the first Viceroy report.
Despite the controversy, the bank said that it expects earnings per share for the year ending February 2018 to be between R38.02 and R39.01 per share, an increase of between 16% and 19% compared to the R32.78 per share in 2017.
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