Categories: Stories

NSSA awash with cash but profit plunges 70 percent

The National Social Security Authority (NSSA) has reported a 68 percent decline in full-year profit for 2015 after a $93 million asset write-down relating to its Celestial office park in Harare and an ill-fated Beitbridge hotel project.

An asset write-down occurs when the book value of an overvalued asset is reduced to levels that reflect market value.

There have been concerns that the state run pension fund overpaid for the Borrowdale office park, while construction costs for the Beitbridge hotel vaulted from $17 million when the tender was floated to $49 million upon completion in 2014.

At the final cost, the 140-room hotel, planned as a four-star property, cost $350 000 per room to construct, more than an average $250 000 per room for a five-star hotel, according to some hotel construction experts.

NSSA’s new board, appointed in July 2015, has instituted a forensic audit into the statutory pensions fund’s investments, which chairman Robin Vela has described as influenced by “historically delinquent decisions.”

Financial statements for the year ended December 2015, published over the weekend, show NSSA’s profit at $32.3 million, down from $103.8 million in 2014, mainly due to the property revaluation losses.

In a statement accompanying NSSA’s financial results, Vela said his board was still in the process of verifying all assets held by the fund to ascertain their real balance sheet value.

“Informed by the outcome of that process, the board has had to be prudent in cases where stated values have been rendered out of sync with prevailing fundamentals and thus unjustifiable,” Vela said.

“Investment properties were written down by $92.9 million being mainly due to the recently purchased Celestial Park and Beitbridge Hotel and Office building, both of which are the subject of a continued forensic investigation, the results of which may have an additional financial impact in subsequent financial statements.”

In June, NSSA closed the Beitbridge hotel, which had been operated since 2014 by Rainbow Tourism Group, after as the hotelier struggled to pay rent for the loss-making property.

Continued next page

(104 VIEWS)

Don't be shellfish... Please SHARE
Google
Twitter
Facebook
Linkedin
Email
Print

This post was last modified on August 1, 2016 10:05 pm

Page: 1 2

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.

Recent Posts

ZiG continues to hold its own

The Zimbabwe Gold, ZiG, continued to firm against the United States dollar ending the week…

May 17, 2024

Zimbabwe requires 46 000 tonnes of grain a month to feed those without food

Zimbabwe will be issuing 7.5 kg of grain a month to each of the six…

May 16, 2024

Stability of ZiG critical to reduce demand for use of US dollar

The stability of Zimbabwe’s local currency, the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG), is critical if the country…

May 15, 2024

More than half Zimbabwe population will need food aid

More than half of Zimbabwe’s population will need food aid between this month and March…

May 15, 2024

ZiG kicks off week on a positive note

Zimbabwe’s currency, the ZiG, kicked off the week on a positive note after firming to…

May 13, 2024

Why Zimbabwe white farmers lost their R2 billion land damages claim in South Africa

Twenty-five white Zimbabwean farmers who took their R2 billion land damages claim to the South…

May 12, 2024