Aveng Explained

Aveng Limited
Type:Public
Predecessor:Anglovaal Engineering
Location City:Melrose Arch, Johannesburg
Location Country:South Africa
Area Served:Africa, Australasia, Southeast Asia, South America
Key People:Sean Flanagan (CEO)[1]
Adrian Macartney (CFO)
Industry:Mining, Construction, Manufacturing, Engineering, Steel
Services:Contract mining, construction, infrastructure development, engineering
Revenue:31 Dec 2019: R11.2bn;[2]
30 Jun 2019: R 25.7bn;
30 Jun 2018: R30.6bn[3]
Net Income:31 Dec 2019: R170 m loss;
30 Jun 2019: R1.7 bn loss
31 Jun 2018: R3.5 bn loss
Assets:R 15.07 Billion (2018)
Num Employees:5 211 (2022)
Subsid:McConnell Dowell, Moolmans
Traded As:

Aveng (formerly Anglovaal Engineering) is an international engineering led contractor focused on infrastructure, resources and contract mining and is listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Its origins lie in modest construction projects in South Africa, but Aveng now operates in engineering, infrastructure development, construction and contract mining across Australia, New Zealand & Pacific Islands, Singapore, Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia and South Africa.

It employs some 5 211 people and has an annual turnover in excess of R30 billion.

History

Strategic review (2017-2019)

After Aveng reported large losses in September 2017, the company's CEO resigned.[4] During the first half of FY2018, Aveng undertook a "robust strategic review" to fully evaluate their financial structure and operational performance to determine the key requirements for our medium- and long-term sustainability. Aveng announced in 2019 a strategic plan that they would dispose of businesses that did not support the group's long-term strategy.[5] Aveng intended to dispose of the Grinaker-LTA and Trident Steel operating divisions first, followed by the individual manufacturing businesses. Aveng sold its rail business, Aveng Rail formerly known as Lennings Rail, in October 2018. Earlier, Aveng had announced it would also sell its Jet Park and Vanderbijlpark properties.[6] Sean Flanagan was named CEO later in 2019, taking over from interim CEO Eric Diack, who returned to the role of chairperson.[7] Aveng disposed of its Rand Roads business unit in July 2019.[8] It told Reuters in 2019 it was selling non-core assets to focus on mining by 2020.[9]

Divestitures (2020-2023)

In relation to non-payment on a bridge project, Aveng lodged a claim against Eskom in April 2020.[10] UBS Group AG became a 6.39% shareholder in Aveng in October 2021.[11] In February 2022, while maintaining its placement on the JSE, Aveng narrowed its offshore listings to only bourses in Singapore and Australia. The company at the time described its two remaining core businesses as McConnell Dowell and Moolmans. It stated it still intended to sell Trident Steel.[12] It completed that sale in October 2022.[13] Aveng Trident Steel at the time supplied a wide range of products to the distribution, mining, construction and automotive industries from its steel processing service centers and warehouses, and its manufacturing and fabrication plants.

Aveng completed a debt restructure and rights issue in March 2021.[14] In 2022, Sean Flanagan remained CEO of Aveng.[15] In 2022, Aveng lost arbitration involving penalties for missing construction deadlines regarding The Leonardo building in South Africa, concerning a contract from 2015 to 2019.[16]

Business and divisions

Core businesses

Construction and Engineering

Mining

Major projects

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sean Flanagan Biography - Aveng website. 11 March 2023.
  2. https://www.aveng.co.za/pdf/interim-results/aveng-interim-31-dec-2019.pdf Aveng Interim Financial Report 2020, Aveng website, Retrieved 09 March 2020
  3. Web site: Aveng Financial Report 2018, Aveng website, Retrieved 17 August 2019 . 17 August 2019 . 17 August 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190817201108/https://www.aveng.co.za/sites/group/files/downloads/financials/annual_results/avengfinancialreport2018.pdf . dead .
  4. Web site: Aveng CEO resigns as it reports massive loss. 27 September 2017. Moneyweb. 11 March 2023.
  5. https://www.iol.co.za/business-report/companies/aveng-says-to-sell-non-core-assets-after-strategic-review-18864224 Ana Reporter, (18 January 2019), Aveng says to sell non-core assets after strategic review
  6. Web site: Aveng to sell rail business to Mathupha Capital for R133m. Terence. Creamer. www.engineeringnews.co.za. 11 March 2023.
  7. Web site: Aveng names Sean Flanagan CEO. Mariaan. Webb. www.engineeringnews.co.za. 11 March 2023.
  8. https://www.engineeringnews.co.za/article/aveng-disposes-of-rand-roads-business-unit-2019-07-12 Aveng disposes of Rand Roads business unit
  9. Web site: Aveng to focus on mining once non-core asset sales completed next year . 30 August 2019 .
  10. Web site: Aveng lodges R40m claim against Eskom . 15 April 2020 .
  11. Web site: Swiss investment bank UBS bets on hobbled Aveng .
  12. Web site: Aveng narrows offshore listing focus to Australia and Singapore .
  13. Web site: Aveng turnaround: R700m sale of Trident Steel a 'major milestone' . 6 October 2022 .
  14. Web site: Aveng concludes successful rights issue and debt restructure. 11 March 2023.
  15. Web site: WATCH: Aveng CEO Sean Flanagan on slump in profit .
  16. Web site: Aveng to pay penalties for missing the Leonardo deadline .