SOUTH AFRICA · BUSINESS
Key Facts
—The sale: Pick n Pay placed 11.5 percent of Boxer with investors in May, about 57.3 million shares at R82 each, raising roughly R4.7 billion ($290 million).
—The stake: the grocer’s holding in its discount chain fell from more than 65 percent to about 53 percent, seven months after listing Boxer in late 2024.
—The engine: Boxer grew turnover more than 12 percent in the year to March and added 51 net stores to reach 576; Pick n Pay’s own supermarkets slipped 1.6 percent.
—The crisis: in the year to February 2024 the group lost about R3.2 billion ($198 million) and was technically insolvent, breaching debt covenants.
—The rescue: a R4 billion rights offer plus the Boxer listing raised about R12.5 billion ($770 million) and returned the group to net cash.
—The price: the Ackerman family, builders of the business since 1966, gave up the chairmanship and control as fresh capital came in.
—The gap: rival Shoprite now turns over about R253 billion ($15.6 billion), more than double Pick n Pay’s roughly R120 billion ($7.4 billion).
Pick n Pay, South Africa’s storied grocer, has sold another 11.5 percent of its discount chain Boxer for about R4.7 billion ($290 million), fresh evidence that the turnaround which already cost the Ackerman family control is running slower and costlier than planned.
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Pick n Pay keeps selling the one thing that works
The May placement of about 57.3 million Boxer shares at R82 each cut the group’s stake in the discounter to about 53 percent, from more than 65 percent, per Billionaires.Africa. Boxer listed on the Johannesburg bourse only in late 2024.
Boxer is the group’s engine. Aimed at lower-income and rural shoppers, it lifted turnover more than 12 percent in the year to March and opened 51 net new stores to reach 576.
The legacy Pick n Pay supermarkets went the other way. Their turnover slipped 1.6 percent as the group closed or converted loss-making stores.
How a retail dynasty lost control
Raymond Ackerman bought a small Cape Town grocery business in 1966 and built it into South Africa’s leading grocer, famously taking on apartheid-era price controls to discount bread, milk and fuel. He introduced the hypermarket to South Africa in 1975 and died in 2023.
His son Gareth chaired the board for years. In the rescue that followed the group’s 2024 crisis, the family gave up the chairmanship and saw its stake diluted, closing nearly six decades of family control.
The crisis that forced the rescue
In the year to February 2024, Pick n Pay swung to a net loss of about R3.2 billion ($198 million) and disclosed it was technically insolvent, with liabilities exceeding assets by roughly R183 million. It had breached its debt covenants.
The insolvency disclosure, more than the loss itself, forced the board’s hand. A market that had watched the grocer drift for a decade finally demanded a full rescue.
The response came in two steps. A R4 billion rights offer was followed by Boxer’s separate listing on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, which sold roughly a third of the chain for about R8.5 billion.
Together the moves brought in around R12.5 billion ($770 million). They also returned the group to a net cash position.
The rescue changed the shareholder register as much as the balance sheet. Institutions that funded the rights offer now sit where the founding family once did.
What the turnaround has fixed, and what it has not
Chief executive Sean Summers, back at the helm since 2023, says three of his six priorities are largely done: recapitalising the group, rebuilding management and resetting the store base. Group turnover rose 3.4 percent last year and online sales jumped almost 33 percent.
Trading profit still fell 4.2 percent, and the group remains in headline loss, though a narrower one than it had feared. In May it opened a retrenchment consultation for store-based staff.
Summers says the product range has improved, store standards have risen and a new logistics arrangement should cut costs in the years ahead. With the store reset finished, the group plans to open outlets again, favouring smaller formats to keep rents down.
Some analysts read the second Boxer sell-down as a warning that the core is harder to fix than management first thought. Guidance on when the supermarkets break even has already been pushed back.
Why the story matters beyond South Africa
South Africa’s grocery war holds a lesson familiar to emerging-market investors: the value sits at the bottom of the pyramid. The no-frills discounter is outgrowing the middle-class brand that built the group.
Discounters have rewritten grocery hierarchies from Brazil to Germany, and South Africa is following the script. Boxer and Shoprite’s Usave format now chase the same value-hungry shopper.
The parallel with Latin America is direct, where hard-discount formats have rewritten grocery retail from Colombia to Brazil. Legacy brands survived by shrinking first.
The gap to the leader tells the same story. Shoprite, neck-and-neck with Pick n Pay on revenue in 2007, now turns over more than double its old rival, and the question is whether Pick n Pay can stand on its own without selling more of Boxer to prop it up.
For the Ackermans, the arithmetic is bittersweet. The family’s most valuable legacy asset is thriving exactly where its original brand is weakest.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is Pick n Pay selling Boxer shares?
To fund the turnaround of its loss-making core supermarkets; the May placement of an 11.5 percent stake raised about R4.7 billion ($290 million).
How much of Boxer does Pick n Pay still own?
About 53 percent, down from more than 65 percent after the May placement and from full ownership before the late-2024 listing.
How did the Ackerman family lose control of Pick n Pay?
The 2024 crisis, a R3.2 billion loss and technical insolvency, forced a R4 billion rights offer and the Boxer listing, diluting the family and ending its chairmanship.
Is Pick n Pay profitable now?
Not yet at headline level; trading profit fell 4.2 percent last year and the group posts a narrower headline loss while guiding its supermarkets toward break-even.
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