- Will AI disrupt the payments industry in 2026? Izak van Heerden, Senior Manager: Development at Altron FinTech
- African Banks and Institutions must Lead on Urbanisation Finance – or Risk being Sidelined by Foreign Investors, says Pan-African banker
- How to Survive When Your Business Hits a Wall
- Driving business efficiency across the fintech ecosystem
- Accion Announces Close of $61.6M Second Accion Venture Lab Fund Investing in Early-Stage Inclusive Fintech
Steinhoff Former Chairman Wiese Says Probe Report Supports Claim
JOHANNESBURG (Capital Markets in Africa) – Former Steinhoff International Holdings NV Chairman Christo Wiese says the retailer’s overview of a forensic probe into the company’s accounting irregularities supports his 59 billion rand ($4.1 billion) claim against the company.
A report by PwC that was published last week found that a small group of former managers and non-Steinhoff executives structured deals that substantially inflated profits and asset values, according to a summary the company released late Friday. Wiese, a South African billionaire and once Steinhoff’s biggest shareholder, lodged his claim in April, looking to claw back investments he made before the share price crashed when the accounting scandal emerged in late 2017.
“It’s clear from the report that this wasn’t just done over the last few years, but goes back a decade or more,” Wiese said by phone on Monday. “Now it’s to follow the trail and see: If money was stolen, where did it go?”
Lawsuits against Steinhoff have piled up across three countries. Wiese’s said that while he believed the company was not in a position to pay, he was seeking a settlement that would benefit all stakeholders. He said he had no desire to put Steinhoff in liquidation. Wiese became Steinhoff’s largest shareholder when he sold Pepkor, Africa’s biggest clothing chain, to the company in 2015.
Source: Bloomberg Business News
