Business and Technology

Viceroy slapped with R50m penalty over Capitec report

The Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) has slapped a R50-million administrative penalty on Viceroy Research and three partners – Aiden Lau, Fraser John Perring and Gabriel Bernarde – for publishing “false, misleading or deceptive” statements about Capitec Bank in 2018 that caused its share price to drop by 23%.

The FSCA says Viceroy Research and its partners had contravened Section 81 of the Financial Markets Act, which makes it an offence to publish false or misleading statements about securities and which the author “ought reasonably to know” is false, misleading or deceptive. The act also makes it an offence to omit material facts about securities that could lead to making false or misleading conclusions about securities. Once made aware of false or misleading statements in the course of research, the author must, without delay, publish a correction.

FSCA Commissioner Unathi Kamlana told journalists on Wednesday that Viceroy Research was alerted to the fact that its research on Capitec Bank was based on false or misleading assumptions, yet it failed to issue a correction when this was brought to its attention. The FSCA did not name the partner who had taken a short position in Capitec shares.

The regulator says some of the factors determining the size of the fine were the need to deter this type of conduct in the future, the seriousness of the contravention, the losses suffered by Capitec shareholders (while Viceroy and its partner benefitted financially), and the impact the report had on SA’s financial system.

Source: moneyweb

In other news – Rihanna drops lawsuit against dad

Rihanna has dropped her lawsuit against her dad. The Diamonds singer – whose real name is Robyn Rihanna Fenty.

Rihanna

Has reached a settlement with Ronald Fenty and agreed to drop her case against him, just weeks before they were due to appear in court for a trial, RadarOnline reports. Learn more