State-owned defence company Denel has announced it will institutionalise and implement a new turnaround plan to effect a self-sustaining business.
The plan is particularly focused on streamlining the company, growing its order pipeline and accessing new revenue streams.
Chief restructuring officer Riaz Salojee said during a media briefing on August 11 that the plan has the support of the Department of Public Enterprises (DPE) and the Denel board, and will be strengthened through a formalised memorandum of cooperation with the Department of Defence (Dof) and its arms procurement agency the Armaments Corporation of South Africa, to ensure alignment on sovereign and strategic capabilities.
Denel was a stable State-owned enterprise between 2010 and 2015, but started showing signs of financial distress in 2016/17, partly owing to State capture and emerging weaknesses in management, leadership, project execution and contract management.
The company’s revenue had fallen from a peak of R8.2-billion in 2015/16 to under R2-billion in 2021/22.
It also has not helped that the South African defence budget spend in relation to gross domestic product (GDP) has been declining for a number of years down to 0.7%. This compares with the world’s average spend on defence as a percentage of GDP, which sits at about 2%.
Salojee believes Denel can start being self-sustaining with an order book of R12-billion and reach a complete turnaround and solid revenue generation with an order book of R30-billion.
The current Denel business model, however, remains materially lossmaking, but some improvements can be made on the execution of current orders, among other efforts.
The turnaround plan is premised on six elements – reducing costs and improving performance; engaging staff who are performance oriented; increasing the customer base; implementing an effective supply chain, which relates to procurement processes and contract management, as well as optimal stock levels; optimising planning and production; and establishing key partnerships and joint ventures.
Responding to whether Denel will be asking for turnaround capital from the fiscus, interim chairperson Gloria Serobe said it would first seek to raise funds by selling noncore assets and reducing its cost base wherever possible.
However, Denel has submitted a recapitalisation application to the National Treasury through the DPE, to address the company’s legacy debt and introduce liquidity.
When asked whether retrenchments were in store, Serobe affirmed that Denel would follow the necessary consultative and legal processes before embarking on such action.
She added that the turnaround plan was not meant to negatively impact employees.
Salojee said the strategic intent of Denel was to reduce dependence on the fiscus. Rather, a rationalised Denel would focus on its proven capabilities in the fields of guided weapons, land defence systems, aircraft engineering and maintenance and the delivery of complex integrated systems for the security and cyber-environments.
However, the problem at the moment was the fixed cost of the business being far in excess of revenue and executable business.
The company will now focus on achieving higher levels of efficiency by adopting a smaller geographic footprint and streamlining policies and processes, including on engineering, manufacturing and the support environment.
“We intend to grow long-term strategic partnerships with the local defence and technology sectors, and entrench our position once again in the local and international markets,” Salojee said.
He noted that there remained a significant interest in Denel’s battle-proven intellectual property, adding that the rapidly changing global defence environment would create opportunities to market the company’s products.
The “reset” of the company will be done in three stages: stabilisation, which is based on current revenues, obligations and reduced infrastructure; followed by sustainability, which will be based on exp...