African Sun terminates Legacy agreement

Share
Tweet
Post
Send

Hospitality entity, African Sun has terminated a hotel management contract with Legacy Hospitality Management Services Limited, after 3 and half years of operationalisation.

Following the snapping of a controlling stake in African Sun, the majority shareholder Brainworks pushed for an organisational restructuring in a move the group said was aimed at globalising African Sun’s hotel brands as well as making them more competitive.

Legacy Hotel Management Services is a subsidiary of Legacy Group of Hotels. The latter is one of the largest hotel chains in Africa with operations in Ghana, South Africa, Namibia, among others.

The contract with African Sun was with respect to the management of 5 hotels namely Elephant Hills, Monomotapa, Troutbeck Resort, Hwange Safari Lodge and The Kingdom at Victoria Falls Hotels.

Overall Africa Sun operates 12 hotels in Zimbabwe which includes 3 Holiday Inn branded Hotels in Harare, Bulawayo and Mutare. Substantial refurbishments have been undertaken across the hotel portfolio over the last 2 years, in line with the adopted model.

The remodelling from a hotel management to a hotel investment group could have been influenced by a years of stuttering as the group struggled to post consistent positive earnings while managing its own hotels.

The group recorded bottomline losses up until 2015, which is the year the company engaged Legacy for management of the above mentioned 5 hotels, before recording profit between 2016 and 2018. It is also worth noting that the bottomline position before 2016 was weighed by heavy gearing, as legacy debt chewed deep into earnings.

The coming in of Brainworks which pushed for disposal of a stake in property concern Dawn resulted in freeing up of financial resources and the subsequent extinction of legacy debt.

Although the group did not highlight what could have caused the termination of the contract, just 3 years into its implementation and also at a time African Sun was reporting firmer earnings, it is likely that the shifts in the macro economic environment could have influenced the decision.

The liberalisation of the exchange rate between the USD and the RTGS$ implies increased costs, in line with the exchange rate which consequently pushes management fees due to Legacy.

In a bid to manage costs in an inflationary environment, most companies will resort to looking inwards thus substituting foreign services.

Source: EQUITY AXIS NEWS

Share
Tweet
Post
Send

Related Posts

Africa Travel Week Announces 2026 Media Awards Winners

Africa Travel Week (ATW) has announced the winners of its 2026 Media Awards, honouring the journalists, photographers and content creators bringing Africa’s travel and tourism stories to global audiences. Now

Sponsored

Follow Us

Follow Us on X

#VoyagesAfriq | The Travel, Hospitality and Tourism Education Summit in Lusaka spotlighted a critical gap: graduates lack practical skills.

Stakeholders called for structured, supervised and paid apprenticeships aligned to industry needs.

Read more.

#VoyagesAfriq || Africa Travel Week (ATW) has announced the winners of its 2026 Media Awards, honouring the journalists, photographers and content creators bringing Africa’s travel and tourism stories to global audiences. @ATravelWeek

#VoyagesAfriq || Speaking to VoyagesAfriq on the sidelines of the event, Head of Marketing for @Tourism_Board Charmaine Matheus, underscored the country’s strategic pivot towards the Meetings, Incentives, Conferences and Exhibitions (MICE) #WTMAfrica

#VoyagesAfriq || The boutique travel event, held at the Norval Foundation in Cape Town, recorded a 37% increase in attendance compared to 2025, with 87% of buyers attending for the first time, drawn from 32 countries. @ILTM_events

#ILTMAfrica

Load More