A KAP executive director has sparked controversy after selling R6.5 million worth of shares just days before the company issued a profit warning. Gerhard Victor, CEO of KAP’s PG Bison division, offloaded 2.6 million shares at over R2.50 each on 6 June. Three days later, KAP announced its full-year earnings would drop by more than 30%, sending shares plummeting 20%. The company insists the sale was part of Victor’s retirement planning and unrelated to the trading update, but the timing has raised eyebrows among investors and regulators.
KAP claims Victor, as a divisional CEO, had no prior knowledge of the impending profit warning. However, critics argue that such significant corporate disclosures take time to prepare, making the proximity of the two events questionable. The trading update revealed worsening performance in the second half of the financial year, driven by rising costs at PG Bison’s new fibreboard plant and weaker demand in KAP’s automotive foam division. Victor’s sale accounted for nearly a day’s average trading volume, amplifying scrutiny over whether it constituted opportunistic insider trading.
While KAP maintains proper procedures were followed, the incident highlights the delicate balance between personal financial planning and corporate transparency. Shareholders are left questioning whether Victor’s divestment was merely poorly timed or a red flag about KAP’s undisclosed struggles. With regulators likely to examine the trade, the fallout could extend beyond share price damage, testing investor confidence in the company’s governance. As KAP navigates its operational challenges, this episode serves as a cautionary tale on executive share dealings ahead of market-sensitive announcements.

