Vela Footwear — Executive Summary
Vela Footwear seeks R331 million of total facilities (equity, grant, senior debt, IDC concessional funding and a revolving facility) to build a vertically-integrated South African footwear manufacturer — scaling revenue from R192 million to R769 million by Year 5 as the EBITDA margin rises from 0.9% to 17.7%, delivering a 41.9% base-case project IRR and supporting 875 direct jobs.
Section 2 · Business Plan
Executive Summary
Vela Footwear seeks R331 million of total facilities (equity, grant, senior debt, IDC concessional funding and a revolving facility) to build a vertically-integrated South African footwear manufacturer — scaling revenue from R192 million to R769 million by Year 5 as the EBITDA margin rises from 0.9% to 17.7%, delivering a 41.9% base-case project IRR and supporting 875 direct jobs.
Vela Footwear Manufacturing (Pty) Ltd is a proposed vertically
integrated footwear manufacturer designed to capture the structural
re-shoring opportunity created by South Africa’s Retail-Clothing,
Textile, Footwear and Leather (R-CTFL) Master Plan. From a single modern
plant in KwaZulu-Natal, Vela will produce certified safety and
industrial footwear, school footwear and casual leather footwear for
domestic industrial buyers, retailers and government channels —
substituting imports that today account for the majority of the local
market.
The opportunity
South Africa’s footwear market was valued at roughly US$4.6
billion in 2025, with domestic consumption approaching
91 million pairs per year by the end of the decade. Yet
the country imports the overwhelming majority of the footwear it
consumes — some US$320 million of shoe imports in 2024,
led by China, Vietnam and Italy. The R-CTFL Master Plan targets lifting
locally manufactured share from around 44% to 65% by 2030, supported by
tariff protection (a 30% ad valorem duty, a proposed increase in the
specific duty to R20 per pair, and 15% import VAT), preferential
development finance, and a 7.5%-of-value-addition production incentive.
Vela is structured precisely to convert this policy tailwind into
bankable industrial capacity.
The business
Vela will operate three complementary product lines from one
facility, balancing margin, volume and brand value:
- Safety & industrial footwear — certified to
SANS / ISO 20345, sold on contract to mining, construction, logistics
and manufacturing buyers. The highest-margin line and the anchor of the
business, growing to roughly R403 million of revenue by Year 5. - School footwear — a high-volume,
price-competitive line for retail and government / social channels,
providing baseload factory utilisation and counter-seasonal
demand. - Casual & lifestyle leather — a locally
designed branded range that leverages KwaZulu-Natal’s leather supply
chain and the Master Plan’s localisation drive to build durable brand
equity.
The plant is vertically integrated, incorporating in-house
polyurethane and rubber sole injection-moulding alongside cutting,
stitching and assembly. Vertical integration protects margin, shortens
lead times for contract customers, and maximises the locally added value
that underpins both tariff competitiveness and incentive
eligibility.
Financial highlights
The five-year forecast shows a credible ramp from commissioning to a
profitable, cash-generative operation at scale. Revenue grows roughly
fourfold as capacity fills and the product mix shifts toward
higher-margin safety footwear; gross margin expands from 22.3% to 29.6%
as scale, yield and localisation benefits accrue.
| Metric (R’000 unless stated) | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pairs produced (’000) | 615 | 950 | 1,345 | 1,785 | 2,190 |
| Revenue | 192,075 | 306,430 | 446,080 | 608,355 | 768,595 |
| Gross margin | 22.3% | 24.8% | 26.8% | 28.4% | 29.6% |
| EBITDA | 1,694 | 26,231 | 56,663 | 95,732 | 135,666 |
| EBITDA margin | 0.9% | 8.6% | 12.7% | 15.7% | 17.7% |
| Net profit / (loss) | (28,457) | (3,919) | 24,539 | 48,023 | 75,427 |
| DSCR (x) | 0.12x | 1.59x | 1.52x | 2.34x | 3.38x |
Funding requirement
Vela requires R246 million of committed project
funding plus an R85 million working-capital revolving
facility, giving R331 million of total facilities. The capital
stack blends sponsor and strategic equity (R98 million), a CTFLGP
capital grant (R18 million), senior commercial term debt (R80 million)
and an IDC concessional facility (R50 million). Both term facilities
carry a two-year capital grace period to protect cash through the ramp,
and a R9 million debt-service reserve account (DSRA) is funded at
close.
assumption-sensitive
The project base-case IRR of 41.9% rests on full ramp-up to roughly
2.19 million pairs by Year 5, gross-margin expansion to 29.6%, and
disciplined working-capital management. A combined downside (revenue 10%
below plan and materials three percentage points higher as a share of
sales, exited at a lower 4.0x multiple) still returns 26.3%, but Year 1
EBITDA is thin and the Year 1 DSCR of 0.12x is carried only by the
capital grace period. Investors should treat the headline return as a
well-structured but execution-dependent outcome and weight the downside
case heavily in their decision.
Why this plan is bankable
- Structured for the ramp. Two-year capital grace
on both term facilities, a funded DSRA and an R85 million revolving
facility absorb the cash strain of the build and early-stage operation
before debt service steps up in Year 3. - Conservative re-derivation. Net profit is struck
after full depreciation, full interest and 27% tax, with no smoothing of
early-year losses. Aggressive assumptions are flagged explicitly
throughout rather than buried. - Policy-aligned. Tariff protection, the Master
Plan localisation targets and the 7.5%-of-value-addition production
incentive directly support Vela’s competitiveness and are modelled
prudently as income only from Year 2. - Covenant-aware. The structure is sized so that
DSCR clears a 1.30x covenant from Year 3 (1.52x), improving to 3.38x by
Year 5, while net debt / EBITDA falls below 1.0x.
Confidential — this business plan is provided to prospective investors and lenders for evaluation purposes only and may not be reproduced or distributed without the written consent of Vela Footwear Manufacturing (Pty) Ltd.