It had to happen eventually. The only surprise is that it took so long for AVUSA (nee Johnnic Communications) shareholders to realise that the people running their company were running it into the ground. I refer of course to the proposed takeover of AVUSA by Mvelaphanda Group, subject to their getting 75% shareholder approval.
Last year AVUSA was being stalked by an outfit called Capitau but the deal didn't happen, some suggest because Capitau's due diligence left some important questions unanswered. This time around the Mvela offer of R24 a share is being touted as a "done deal" even though, at the time of writing, the PIC (who hold 17%) have raised objections. But it aint over until the fat lady sings.
Andrew Bonamour, the brains behind the deal and now Mvela's interim CEO has made the usual comforting noises about building up the company, unlocking shareholder value (who locked it up?) and not putting jobs at risk but he has also hinted that one of the major problems has been a sluggish and top heavy management.
This suggests that some major changes need to be made and the decision to appoint Hirt and Carter (now a subsidiary of AVUSA) founder Colin Cary as CEO of AVUSA over acting CEO Mike Robertson means that AVUSA will finally have a businessman with proven skills at the helm for the first time in most employees' living memory.
The succession of clowns who have led the company over the past two decades beggars belief with the last, Prakash Desai, collecting tens of millions of rands as a reward for destroying shareholder value. Desai, previously the company's senior bean counter, was himself a "default" appointment when executive head-hunters couldn't attract a candidate after Connie Malusi's sudden departure. Much the same happened after Desai was kicked out last year and AVUSA MD Mike Robertson was the unlikely candidate for acting CEO.
Word on the street is that the head-hunters met with little success touting what many executives must regard as a poison chalice position, albeit a well remunerated one. Some wags suggested that the reason it was impossible to find a new CEO for AVUSA over an eight month period was that previous CEO's had already emptied the coffers and there wasn't much left to plunder.