Corporate News
By DAVID HERBLING
In Summary
- Peter Matlare on Friday announced that he is leaving the company at the end of the year, but did not give reasons for his exit.
- Mr Matlare leaves four months after revealing that the Kenyan subsidiary, Haco Tiger, had falsified operating profits for the full-year ended September 31, 2014 by up to Sh879 million.
Tiger Brands chief executive Peter Matlare is set to
leave the South African company, which is majority shareholder of
Kenya’s Haco Tiger Brands.
Mr Matlare on Friday announced that he is leaving the
company at the end of the year, but did not give reasons for his exit.
The company said the process of appointing a new group CEO had started.
He leaves four months after revealing that the
Kenyan subsidiary, Haco Tiger, had falsified operating profits for the
full-year ended September 31, 2014 by up to Sh879 million.
“The board has agreed that Matlare will remain in
his position until December 31 and wish him fulfilment and success as he
undertakes new challenges and opportunities,” the company said in a
filing to Johannesburg Securities Exchange (JSE).
The Kenyan firm sacked its managing director
Geoffrey Mwathi Kiarie in May following the accusations of cooking
books. Mr Matlare was appointed to the group in April 2008.
South Africa’s Tiger Brands bought a 51 per cent
stake in Haco Industries from billionaire Kenyan businessman Chris
Kirubi in 2008 for an undisclosed amount, leaving him with a 49 per cent
stake.
The JSE-listed Tiger Brands revealed that
executives at its Kenyan unit altered financial statements and engaged
in pre-invoicing to reach their performance targets.
Stock that was yet to be sold was moved to third party warehouses to make it look like performance targets had been met.
Adjusting for this led to a 30 per cent drop in Haco Tiger Brands’ operating profit for the six months to March 2015.
Mr Matlare announced that Tiger would not press
charges on the suspected executives, saying the firm “will not engage in
a witch-hunt against any of those involved or suspected of involvement
in the scandal.”
Mr Kiarie, whose term as Haco Tiger Brands MD was
terminated in December, was replaced in an acting capacity by Mr Peter
Kang’ethe.
Mr Matlare pointed to the pre-invoicing scandal and
foreign exchange losses in Nigeria as the two main reasons why the
group registered a three per cent decline in operating income.
“The performance of the group’s Kenyan business was
particularly disappointing,” he said. “Haco’s results were negatively
affected by the effects of pre-invoicing and the manipulation of profits
in the previous financial year. Appropriate corrective action has been
implemented,” he said while announcing half-year results in May.
Tiger Brands deals in BIC brand of pens, personal
and household care products such as Ace, Jeyes, Miadi, Motions, TCB,
Bloo and SoSoft and has over 50 manufacturing facilities across the
continent.
“I am proud of the progress we have made since my appointment. Our business model is more resilient, we are more disciplined on cost management,” said Mr Matlare in a statement.
“I am proud of the progress we have made since my appointment. Our business model is more resilient, we are more disciplined on cost management,” said Mr Matlare in a statement.
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