Categories: Stories

Meikles reaches agreement with government over central bank debt

Hospitality and retail group Meikles Limited has reached an agreement with the government over a Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe which has been outstanding for two decades, chairman John Moxon said yesterday.

The Meikles debt accrued in 1998 from transactions related to the group’s dual listing on the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange and the London Stock Exchange.

It stood at $25 million in 1998 but shot up to $47 million at the end of 2013 after the inclusion of interest.

“An agreement with Government has been reached following high level meetings between its representatives, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and ourselves. The final figures now await the signature of the Minister of Finance and Economic Development and the information will be made public thereafter,” Moxon told shareholders at the company’s annual general meeting. 

Meikles company secretary, Thabani Mpofu said that RBZ had agreed to pay eight percent interest per annum for the period it went into the said debt with the company up to August 2015 and then a five percent interest going forward.

“We agreed to stick to the  Debt Assumption Act, so its 8 percent  from 1997 and then we compromise, from August 2015 when it was promulgated ( Debt Assumption Act) the interest payment will be 5 percent per annum,” Mpofu said.

In March last year, Meikles said the government had undertaken to repay outstanding funds in terms of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe debt assumption act of July 2015.

The Act stipulates that an interest rate of five percent is applied to all creditors under the Act.

Mpofu said the agreement which is not yet signed, will see the RBZ debt revised down to around $48 million although that figure could yet come down.

Previously, Meikles claimed it was owed $90 million in debt and interest by the central bank.

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This post was last modified on May 18, 2017 7:08 am

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Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

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