Legal updates and opinions
News / News
New treatment of fractional entitlements in terms of the JSE listings requirements
A recent change to the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) Listings Requirements, which deals with the manner in which entitlements to fractions of securities are treated, may necessitate an amendment to the memorandum of incorporation (MOI) of a listed company.
INTRODUCTION
Fractional entitlements will typically arise in the context of a capitalisation issue, a rights offer or a scrip dividend. For example, a shareholder may be offered, in lieu of a cash dividend, 1.65 shares for every 100 shares held. Fractional entitlements may also arise in the context of a scheme of arrangement or an unbundling.
Only whole shares, and not fractions of shares, may be issued by a company and traded on the JSE. Previously, the Listings Requirements provided that all allocations of securities by a listed company will be rounded up or down, based on the standard rounding convention (i.e. an allocation will be rounded down to the nearest whole number if it is less than 0.5 and rounded up to the nearest whole number if it is equal to or greater than 0.5).
LISTINGS REQUIREMENT
In terms of the amendment to the Listings Requirements, allocations of securities must now be rounded down to the nearest whole number and shareholders must receive a cash payment for the fractions of securities to which they would otherwise have become entitled. The Central Securities Depository Participants and brokers will then sell the shares constituted by the aggregation of the fractions in the open market.
CONCLUSION
If a listed company’s MOI provides for fractional entitlements to be rounded up or down, based on the standard rounding convention, it has until 1 May 2017 to amend its MOI to bring it into line with the change to the Listings Requirements. Until such time as the company has amended its MOI, the provisions of the MOI, and not the amended Listings Requirements, will apply in relation to fractional entitlements. A listed company must clearly state the rounding convention being applied in all relevant corporate action announcements.
Click on the link if you’ like to more information on Werksmans expertise in the Corporate Mergers & Acquisitions sector.
Latest News
Electric vehicle tax incentive: what electric vehicle manufacturers should know
Reviewed by Natalie Scott, Director and Head of Sustainability On 24 December 2024, Cyril Ramaphosa, the President of the [...]
Are raising fees similar to interest?
The tax court, in a reportable judgment handed down on 13 January 2025, considered whether raising fees are finance charges [...]
National Minimum Wage Increases For 2025
With effect from 1 March 2025, the national minimum wage will be adjusted to R28.79 for each ordinary hour worked. [...]
Housing consumer rights headed in the right direction
Assisted by Alexi Andropoulos, Candidate Attorney On Monday, 27 January 2025, while global news headlines flooded with the Expropriation Bill [...]
Expropriation Act: Deconstructed and Demystified
President Cyril Ramaphosa signed the Expropriation Bill into law on 23 January 2025. The newly assented to Expropriation Act No. [...]
Breaking News – Supreme Court of Appeal Rules on Voting Rights of Post-Commencement Creditors in Business Rescue in Landmark Judgment
The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in Mashwayi Projects (Pty) Ltd v Wescoal Mining (Pty) Ltd has delivered a significant [...]