PEP is a multinational retail company based in Cape Town, South Africa. Founded in 1965, PEP operated in 11 countries in Southern Africa with the opening of an outlet in Lobito, Angola in November 2008. [2] As of November 2009, the company reported over 1400 stores in operation, with total employment equalling 14,000 employees. It also owns and runs the largest clothing factory in southern Africa, where it manufactures much of its clothing. [1]

PEP
IndustryRetail
Founded1965
Headquarters,
South Africa
Number of locations
1,800 stores
Area served
Southern Africa
Key people
Jaap Hamman(MD)
Louis Brand (CD)
(FD)
ProductsClothing foods
Number of employees
15,000[1]
ParentPepkor
Websitewww.pepstores.com

PEP's target market is the mass lower to middle income end of the market. As such, it seeks to sell low-cost clothing and is the largest single-brand retailer in South Africa. PEP is a subsidiary of Pepkor.[3]

History

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In 1955, after putting himself through university, the son of a poor South African farmer, Renier van Rooyen, started running a bargain shop part-time in Upington with no previous retail experience in partnership with Gawie Esterhuyzen while they ran other businesses. Eventually becoming more experienced and involved full-time van Rooyen began restructuring and expanding the bargain store, buying out his partner Esterhuyzen in 1956.[4]

Van Rooyen opened an additional store in 1959 to focus on selling just discounted clothing. He amalgamated the two discount stores and added a small warehouse under a holding company called BG Bazaars by 1960 and started expanding outside of Upington. BG Bazaars built quick success by offering good quality clothing, blankets, and shoes at very low prices, maintaining low overheads, and providing friendly personal service focusing on underserved markets similar to the modern retail giant Wal-Mart.[4]

By 1965, Van Rooyen launched the PEP Stores Ltd (known locally as just "PEP"), with just R50,000 in starting capital, in De Aar, followed by branches in Kimberley and Postmasburg integrating all the BG Bazaars branches under the PEP banner. In just two years they opened a further 29 branches with an average turnover of R79,000 each.[4]

Things took a big shift in 1971 when van Rooyen approached Whitey Basson to become the financial director of the new retail chain that van Rooyen had founded. Van Rooyen was planning to list the company on the JSE as Pepkor. [5] Basson agreed to join the company as financial director and in 1974 became head of operations. [6]

By 1981, PEP expanded to 500 stores, 10 factories, 12,000 employees with a turnover of close to R300 million.[5] At this time Christo Wiese also bought out van Rooyen's holdings in Pepkor, becaming the major shareholder and chairperson of Pepkor. [7]

In 2014 Wiese sold Pepkor to Steinhoff International in exchange for about 20% of Steinhoff's issued shares. [8]

References

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  1. ^ a b "PEP Stores :: Looking and feeling good". pepstores.com. 5 January 2009. Archived from the original on 5 January 2009. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  2. ^ "PEP eyes fast-growing Angolan market - SouthAfrica.info". southafrica.info. 10 November 2008. Archived from the original on 10 November 2008. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  3. ^ "PEP Stores :: Our leaders". pepstores.com. 5 January 2009. Archived from the original on 5 January 2009. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  4. ^ a b c Neethling, B. (2024)The man who started a R73 billion business with R1,000 and no business experience. Business Investor
  5. ^ a b "Life of Pep Stores founder Renier van Rooyen was a classic rags-to-riches story". Fin24.com. Naspers. 10 November 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  6. ^ "COVER STORY: Whitey Basson". Accountancy SA. 30 November 2016. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  7. ^ Whitfield, Bruce. Meet Whitey Basson - the retail genius behind the rise of Shoprite (radio show transcript). 702. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  8. ^ Motsoeneng, Tiisetso (18 March 2019). "Steinhoff ex-chair Christo Wiese open to talks over $4bn claim". BusinessLIVE. Retrieved 21 November 2019.