Millions of rands siphoned from Numsa’s insurance company, report shows

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Millions of rands in insurance premiums paid by members of the National Union of Metalworkers of SA (Numsa) were siphoned from life insurer 3Sixty Life to prop up other Numsa-owned companies between 2017 and 2019.

The Prudential Authority, a financial regulator, placed the insurer under curatorship in December 2021, after a year of operating in an insolvent position. This decision is being challenged by the board of 3Sixty Life, including acting CEO Khandani Msibi.

During the court battle, a report ordered by the Prudential Authority in May 2020 by Gerdus Dixon, a partner at auditing company Deloitte, has come to light. The report provides an alarming list of dodgy financial decisions taken by management of 3Sixty Life during 2017, 2018 and 2019, before a massive spike in claims due to Covid left 3Sixty Life struggling to stay afloat.

3Sixty Life is wholly owned by the trust of the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (Numsa), through the Numsa Investment Company. The Numsa Investment Company (NIC) owns the 3Sixty Global Solutions Group (3Sixty Group), which owns the Doves Group, which owns 3Sixty Life.

Khandani Msibi is the lynchpin of this operation and has been since 2008. He is chairperson of 3Sixty Life, and CEO of both the NIC and the 3Sixty Group. He sits on the board of nearly every Numsa-owned company.

Dixon’s report shows that not only did 3Sixty Life pay for things that had no commercial value to the company, including a birthday party for Numsa secretary-general Irvin Jim, but the insurer was also used as a source of loans for companies in the 3Sixty Group, and carried many of the expenses of these companies.

3Sixty Life’s business

According to Msibi’s affidavit in the curatorship challenge, 3Sixty Life’s major sources of premium income are Doves policyholders (49%) and Numsa Financial Services (NFS, 26%). NFS markets products to Numsa members. 3Sixty Life also gets income from retirement funds that service Numsa members.

In his own affidavit, Jim explained that NFS offers Numsa members two schemes. The compulsory scheme has over 280 000 funeral assistance policyholders contributing R2.2 million a month, while the voluntary scheme has 29 400 policyholders, contributing a further R11 million a month. A full income statement was not provided to the court, but these figures suggest that Doves policyholders contribute about R25 million in premium income per month, with the sum of policyholder income at about R50 million a month, or R600 million a year.

This steady stream of premium income balanced by actuarially predictable pay-outs (pre-Covid) meant that 3Sixty Life had ready access to liquid assets.

Loan fever

In September 2017, 3Sixty Life loaned its parent company Doves R6 million, according to the Deloitte report. The plan was for Doves to repay by selling some of its properties but there is no indication that this was done. This loan appears to have been added to an account as by the end of the 2017 reporting period, 3SixtyLife had R19 million in loans receivable from Doves, according to extracts from audited financial statements included in the Deloitte report.

Then on 30 November 2018, 3Sixty Life provided a second loan to Doves, of R27.5 million.

According to the terms of the agreement, Doves was to repay the balance of this loan, which was interest-free, in monthly instalments of R600 000, but, at least by July 2020, no repayments were made.

Dixon said neither loan was subject to solvency or liquidity tests which must be conducted before a loan is issued, nor was there evidence that the terms of the loans were “fair and reasonable” to the company, contrary to the demands of the Companies Act. Further, these loans were extended without notifying the Prudential Authority, as required.

By 2019, Doves owed 3Sixty Life a total of R32 million in loans, according to extracts from audited financial statements included in the Deloitte report. In 2019, 3Sixty Life also lent more than R7 million to other companies in the group, including over R4 million to parent company 3Sixty Group.

Dixon flags the loans as serious governance failures, finding that “the board of directors did not approve the Doves Group and 3Sixty Group loans transactions before they were advanced”, and the requirements of the Companies Act were not met.

However, in a letter from PricewaterhouseCoopers (3Sixty Life’s auditors for 2018) to Dixon, it is confirmed that board members discussed the loans. Msibi and Ola Luthanga, the CFO of the 3Sixty Group, are also directors of 3Sixty Life and of Doves, and also of the 3Sixty Group and the NIC.

Strangely, in September 2018, just two months before the second R27.5-million loan, 3Sixty Life’s board of directors resolved that Doves should provide 3Sixty Life with R7.5 million in exchange for a share subscription. This was apparently transferred to 3Sixty Life in order for it to comply with statutory solvency capital requirements. This transaction was flagged by 3Sixty Life’s auditors for 2021 as a reportable irregularity, as it was an unapproved reduction in share capital, in contravention of the Insurance Act.

In November 2021, 3Sixty Life retroactively notified the Prudential Authority of this manoeuvre.

Payments to other companies

All in all, 3SixtyLife paid R137 million in 2019 to companies in the group – nearly half of its entire operating expenses. In 2018, this figure was R110 million.

Many of these expenses accrued without an agreement in place. In 2017, Dixon identified at least R10 million in expenses to companies in the group made without an agreement in place. In 2018, this grew to R19.3 million. Dixon confirmed that the trend continued into 2019, where these expenses included R2 million to NFS for “petrol expenses”, and R2.2 million to Sechaba Medical Services.

Commission payments made without an agreement in place came under particular scrutiny.

In 2019, Doves received R65.6 million in commissions and R8.9 million in brokerage fees. In 2018, commission to Doves was R60 million, and no brokerage fees were paid to Doves. In 2019, these alone accounted for 25% of total operational expenses.

Dixon found that these commission payments from 3Sixty Life to Doves were made without any written agreement in place, and thus no detail about how commission was calculated. Dixon was told that “commission was not calculated as a percentage of the premiums, but rather as a reimbursement of certain salary and other costs incurred by the Doves Group.”

This absence of agreement is explicitly barred by the Long-Term Insurance Act, and the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act.

Curatorship

Before being placed under curatorship at the urging of the Prudential Authority, 3Sixty Life operated for over a year in breach of statutorily required solvency capital requirements, and for close to a year in breach of minimum capital requirements. It has also not submitted audited financial statements since December 2019.

At the heart of the Prudential Authority’s curatorship application was a concern that policyholders must have their policies honoured, and that the regulator “no longer had faith” that 3Sixty Life’s management could fix its financial position without external assistance. The Prudential Authority had ample evidence of statutory non-compliance at 3Sixty Life, through Dixon’s report.

According to the replying affidavit submitted by the Prudential Authority in reply to Msibi and Jim, none of the recommendations in Dixon’s report had been implemented, after being handed the report in February 2021. In this affidavit, the Prudential Authority says the regulator no longer believes that 3Sixty Life’s directors are “fit and proper”.

Central to Msibi’s attempt to remove the curatorship is the claim that Covid was the underlying cause of the insolvency. But Dixon’s report shows a company struggling to govern itself in accordance with the law, long before the world changed in March 2020.

Doves had not responded to questions from GroundUp by the time of publication. Msibi has also not responded to emails we have sent him.

This article was first published by GroundUp and is republished with permission in terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Licence.