Broad-based and employee share ownership schemes – the latest update

21st May 2015

Broad-based and employee share ownership schemes – the latest update

The Department of Trade and Industry caused wide spread uncertainty and confusion in its Notice 396 in the Government Gazette of 5 May 2015 which stated that black participants in broad based and employee share ownership schemes could only contribute a maximum three points (out of the total available 25 BBBEE ownership points) to a firm’s BBBEE score in terms of the Codes of Good Practice (“Codes“) issued under the Broad Based Black Empowerment Act (“BBBEE Act“).  In one stroke the Notice overturned accepted past practice and threatened many existing and planned BBBEE ownership transactions which relied on such schemes.

On 8 May 2015, the Department issued a statement that BBBEE transactions concluded before 1 May 2015 would not be affected and that the Department would appoint a Technical Task Team to explore the “appropriate balance between active (direct) and passive (broad based schemes) ownership” and report to the Minister within thirty days.  On 15 May 2015, the Department issued a further Notice in the Government Gazette which withdrew Notice 396.  It accordingly now appears that the status quo has been restored and that broad based and employee share ownership schemes are again eligible to contribute to all (and not just three) of the 25 available BBBEE ownership points in the Codes.

The lack of prior consultation by the Department on such a fundamental issue is unfortunate.  From a procedural perspective, any change in the number of points contributed by broad based and employee share ownership schemes would require an amendment to the Codes. In terms of the BBBEE Act, the Minister is obliged to publish a draft amendment to the Codes in the Government Gazette and allow at least sixty days for public comment on the draft. The Codes may not be amended by a Notice in the Government Gazette.

It has been argued that broad based and employee share ownership schemes are “passive” without specific black individuals who can drive transformation in the company. This is a generalisation as a minority shareholding in a company by black individuals can also be “passive”. Each case must be assessed on its own facts and circumstances.  Furthermore –

Furthermore, the Codes have specific requirements for broad based and employee share ownership schemes including that –

Further rules for broad based ownership schemes are that –

Additional rules for employee share ownership programmes are that –

The above requirements of the Codes go some way in meeting the criticism that broad based and employee share ownership programmes are “passive”. Such generalisations are not helpful and each scheme should be assessed according to its own facts and circumstances. Individual fiduciaries of the schemes can act in the same way as individual black shareholders and participants in the schemes are not without rights or remedies.

Arguments that these schemes may be used for fronting apply equally with regard to individual black shareholding structures. Unlike individual black ownership structures, the above requirements in the Codes for broad based and employee share ownership schemes provide protections against fronting. The BBBEE Act was amended with effect from 24 October 2014 to criminalise fronting practices and the consequences of a contravention are severe including ten year jail terms and a fine not exceeding 10% of the annual turnover of a company.  In addition, the guilty person may not contract or transact any business with any organ of state or public entity for ten years from the date of conviction and will be entered into the register of tender defaulters held by the National Treasury.  These provisions (as well the establishment of a BBBEE Commission which will have wide ranging powers including to subpoena documents and witnesses) create a statutory enforcement mechanism for actively combatting fronting, whether through a broad based ownership scheme, an employee share scheme or an individual black shareholder structure.

Given the great importance of BBBEE in South Africa, it is vital for local and foreign business to have certainty as to how BBBEE is measured. It is hoped that the Department will draw the appropriate lessons from the withdrawal of Notice 396 and that in future there will be more consultation and dialogue between Government and business with regard to BBBEE laws, codes of good practice, rules and policies.

Written by Pieter Steyn, Director, Werksmans Attorneys