Steinhoff faces shareholders as it battles to stay afloat

Reuters  |  AMSTERDAM/CAPE TOWN 

By Toby and Wendell Roelf

Steinhoff, which runs chains such as Britain's Poundland, in the U.S. and Conforama in France, is fighting for its survival after discovering holes in its accounts. The company's shares have lost more than 90 percent of their stock market value and assets have had to be sold to raise cash.

"The group has been engaging with its creditors across the debt clusters to create a window of stability and to develop a restructuring plan," the company said in a website presentation as it began a shareholder meeting in Amsterdam, where the firm is registered.

Steinhoff's total borrowings stand at 10.4 billion euros ($12.7 billion), racked up in an acquisition spree over the last decade.

Newly appointed head said the company had sufficient cash to meet its immediate needs but had technically breached some debt agreements and remains in a "tough position".

is trying to renegotiate its debt and will likely sell more assets as part of any restructuring plan, Dieperink said.

Shares in were up 1.9 percent at 2.61 rand in Johannesburg, valuing it at roughly 11 billion rand. Just four months ago, it was worth more than 200 billion rand ($16.5 billion).

'BURNING BUILDING'

has hired auditors to investigate its problems and the accounting firm has gathered millions of records.

said initial findings from the probe, expected to be completed by the end of the year, have revealed that a pattern of transactions over "a number of years" led to a "material overstatement of income and asset values."

South Africa's Public Investment Corporation, which manages around 1 trillion rand in government employee pensions and was Steinhoff's second-largest shareholder, said it was worried about the time it would take to complete the investigation.

"The information was useful but we are worried about the process, it seems to be taking very long and before the process is concluded we won't get audited financial statements and it seems that will only be by the end of the year," he told reporters in after the meeting was streamed to an exhibition and trade show centre there.

There were dozens of protesters in Cape Town, led by civil servants union

Shareholder group is suing along with banks that prepared its stock market flotation in in 2015.

"Where was the governance? ... Where was the supervisory board?," said of the

Steinhoff's said no current or proposed board members were implicated in the accounting irregularities, which date back to at least its 2015 accounts.

The company has reported its former to the over suspected corruption. Jooste was an instrumental figure in the company's rapid growth into a multinational vying with the likes of

Former and biggest shareholder, Christo Wiese, who is not accused of any wrongdoing, resigned shortly after the scandal broke.

"Typically when in a burning building you run out. Some stayed. We are happy some stayed in the burning building to help," Sonn told investors at the meeting.

"We want to uncover the truth, show the world what has happened, prosecute any wrongdoing and reinstate trust in the company."

($1 = 12.0875 rand)

(Writing by Tiisetso Motsoeneng; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, April 20 2018. 21:52 IST