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PK Investments Limited (“PKI”), the largest shareholder in MAS, has highlighted that the Hyprop offer is inconsistent with the JSE Listings Requirements governing corporate actions, specifically the requirement for an offer to remain open for 12 days after becoming unconditional. More importantly, the offer is not a bona fide attempt to acquire MAS shares, but rather a cleverly disguised request for MAS shareholders to grant Hyprop free options to acquire their shares at a future date - and at a price far below market value, intrinsic value, and competing offers.
In essence, this proposal gives Hyprop the right - but not the obligation - to acquire MAS shares from independent shareholders at a future date, under terms determined by Hyprop, but which offer must be accepted by 25 July 2025. The option is "free" in as Hyprop is not required to pay anything upfront for the right to acquire MAS shares in the future. This gives Hyprop a significant advantage, as it can choose to exercise the option only if it is beneficial to them, while shareholders receive no compensation for granting this right, and are prevented from considering alternatives.
“The Hyprop proposal is engineered to prevent shareholders from considering alternative offers, locking them into an arrangement that is materially below current trading levels, MAS’s NAV, and PKI’s own offer. This is essentially a free call option to Hyprop, with no fixed timeline for implementation. The inherent risk for shareholders if they accept the Hyprop free option is that they will be tied up without any time limitation or alternatives as Hyprop seeks to obtain regulatory, shareholder and other approvals. This carries zero risk for Hyprop with shareholders exposed to significant transaction risk,” said Martin Slabbert, CEO of Prime Kapital.
The so-called cash component in Hyprop’s proposal is a “smoke and mirrors” exercise, designed to distract from the deeply unattractive pricing of the equity swap.
The cash portion covers only a fraction of the free options Hyprop is seeking, with the equity swap component valuing MAS at just R18.03, or €0.88 per share — far below Friday’s market close (22% discount), MAS’s IFRS NAV (48% discount), PKI’s cash offer of €1.40 per share (37% discount), and PKI’s equity offer currently valued at €1.50 per share (42% discount), which also provides a guaranteed cash exit at 90% of MAS’s adjusted NAV per share.
PKI has tabled a voluntary offer that is significantly more attractive for MAS shareholders:
“The manner in which the Hyprop offer has been conducted raises profound governance and regulatory concerns,” added Slabbert. “The offer is not a genuine acquisition, but an attempt to secure control without paying for it - at a price that deeply undervalues MAS in an attempt to hoodwink minority and vulnerable shareholders. This is not just a corporate power grab. It is a fundamental test of governance, fairness, and transparency in South Africa’s capital markets. Independent MAS shareholders - and the JSE itself - are at risk of becoming collateral damage in a scheme engineered by a small group of self-interested actors.”
This is a crucial time for MAS. Unity among independent shareholders is essential to protect value, fairness, and high governance standards. PKI remains fully committed to safeguarding shareholder interests and achieving the best possible outcome for all.