Friday, July 3, 2026
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Who’s doing what this week in the South African M&A space?

South32 has entered into a binding conditional agreement to dispose of its global aluminium value chain to Alcoa, an American industrial corporation producing aluminum. The transaction, with an implied enterprise value of up to US$5,6 billion, will see Alcoa acquire South32’s interests in Worsley Alumina (86%), Hillside Aluminium (100%), MRN bauxite mine (33%), Brazil Alumina refinery (36%) and Brazil Aluminium smelter (40%). Excluded from the transaction is Mozal Aluminium which remains on care and maintenance. Alcoa will pay an upfront consideration of $3,1 billion, $1,08 billion in Alcoa shares, will assume $750 million in net debt and lease liabilities and pay a further $750 million if alumina and aluminium prices exceed agreed thresholds over the next four years. The divestment repositions South32 as a pure-play, upstream base metals producer predominantly in copper and zinc.

Labat Africa is to acquire an additional 24.45% stake in Classic International for a purchase consideration of R27 million to be settled through the issue of 900 million Labat shares at an issue price of R0,03 per share. The additional stake will result in Labat holding a 100% shareholding in the business. Classic provides high-performance computing hardware, AI-driven analytics capability and disruptive engineering solutions designed to improve operational efficiency in complex enterprise environments.

In terms of the proposed scheme of arrangement, Brikor will buy back a maximum of 116,1 million shares at 17 cents per share for an aggregate R19,7 million. The offer excludes Nikkel Trading 392 and the Brikor Share Incentive Scheme. The high costs of maintaining a public listing and the persistent illiquidity of its shares were cited as the primary reasons for its exit.

In April, Clientèle announced the proposed delisting of the company by way of a conditional offer effected through a pro rata repurchase of shares. The offer, in respect of no more than 36,261,776 offer shares at R19.90 per share closed this week with acceptances of 21,097,797 shares for an aggregate R419,85 million.

Vodacom has updated shareholders on its acquisition of an additional 20% stake in Safaricom announced in December 2025. Conditions precedent have been fulfilled and the acquisition is effective as of 30 June 2026.

The disposal agreement of the Arlington Property for a cash consideration of US$30 million announced by PPC in August 2025 has lapsed with the agreement becoming null and void. The disposal consideration did not occur by the extended longstop date of 30 June 2026. The property remains a non-core asset for the company.

Zeder Investments has extended the long stop date of its announced February 2026 disposal of Zaad to 30 November 2026 from the initial 31 July 2026.

Differential Capital and its consortium of investors have taken an equity stake in the mining division of Murray and Roberts (in business rescue) for R1,27 billion. The business rescue plan was approved in April 2026, and the transaction was completed on 25 June 2026, securing the transfer of numerous local and foreign subsidiaries in South Africa, Canada, Australia, Portugal and Chile among others. The transaction has preserved 2,600 jobs and safeguards vital mining capabilities.

Strategic Transfer Solutions (STS), a global insurance and reinsurance broker, has acquired 100% of Aircraft Risk Company (ARC), an aviation brokerage, marking an expansion into the aviation specialist area. Beyond Africa, STS will scale its footprint into Europe, Latin America and Asia in which ARC will play a meaning role in its global strategy. For the meantime ARC will continue to operate under its existing brand.

Infra Impact Investment Managers (IIIM), through its Mid-Market Infrastructure Fund I, has acquired a minority shareholding in Cape Town Biogas, an organic waste processing facility. The stake was acquired from Metier Sustainable Capital Fund II, which remains the controlling investor. Cape Town Biogas utilises leading anaerobic digestion technology to process 250 tonnes of organic waste per day into three valuable outputs – Compressed Biomethane, Renewable Beverage-Grade Carbon Dioxide and valuable agricultural inputs.

Preference Capital has received a R350 million capital injection from Titan Premier Investments. Preference Capital supports businesses generating up to R1 billion in turnover, offering unsecured loans from R100,000 to R7 million and secured facilities to a maximum of R60 million.

Mauritian headquartered private equity firm Adena Partners has acquired a majority stake the Minet Group, a South African-based pan-African risk insurance adviser. Minet provides insurance brokerage, risk advisory, and employee benefits solutions to a diverse base of clients, including corporates, SMEs, and institutions across nine African countries. The stake was acquired from private equity investor Capitalworks. Financial details were undisclosed.

South African non-profit organisation Afrika Tikkun Group has disposed of its advisory, recruitment, training and placement company Afrika Tikkun Services. The disposal, to a consortium, will allow the Group to build and focus on its model for child and youth development. Afrika Tikkun Services will change its name to ATS and will operate independently under the new ownership. Financial details were not disclosed.

Maia Capital Partners has provided R150 million in mezzanine debt financing to Nesa Power, a commercial and industrial solar and battery storage developer. The funding will be used as growth capital to acquire solar photovoltaic project sites and expand Nesa’s portfolio of long-term power purchase agreements.

African International Schools network, Enko Education, has entered the East African market through the acquisition of Kitengela International Schools (KISC), a group of seven schools across three campuses in Kenya’s Kitengela region. KISC will retain its name, identity and day-to-day operations.

Weekly corporate finance activity by SA exchange-listed companies

Fortress Real Estate has place 55,670,104 Fortress B shares representing c.4.5% of the company’s B ordinary share capital. The placement is by way of an accelerated bookbuild offering. The shares were placed at a price of R24.25 per B ordinary share representing a 1% discount to the 30-day VWAP of 29 June 2026. Proceeds will be used to advance the rollout of the SA and CEE logistics development pipeline and to capitalise on retail opportunities.

PKMI has announced that it intends to acquire up to 30 million MAS plc shares. Shareholders may offer all or part of their MAS shares. If the bid is fully accepted, PKMI’s shareholding in MAS will increase from 61.3% to 65.7%. Shareholders have until 3 July 2026 to offer their shares.

Pan African Resources will issue 102,641,421 new shares in the form of Pan African CDIs to Emmerson shareholders as settlement of the aggregate scheme consideration. The shares will be issued at £1.09 per share.

Suspended in July 2022, Sail Mining announced in December 2025 that it would make a conditional offer to repurchase, on a pro rata basis, all the company’s ordinary shares and would simultaneously terminate its listing on the AltX Board of the JSE. Shareholder approval is required – updates to follow in due course.

SAB Zenzele Kabili will pay shareholders a special dividend of 57 cents per share from income reserves. The dividend will be paid on 20 July 2026.

PBT will make a capital reduction distribution to shareholders of 18.5 cents from income reserves with a payment date of 20 July 2026.

The Capital Appreciation Empowerment Trust has disposed of 40 million Araxi shares in a block trade at R1.85 per share. The proceeds will be used to repay all its debt and leave the remaining assets, 35 million Araxi shares, unencumbered.

Sebata’s listing was suspended in October 2025 for failing to publish its audited financial results ended March 31, 2025, and interim results for the period ended 30 September 2025 within the prescribed period. The company has now published these results and expects the listing to be reinstated on the JSE on or before 31 July 2026.

The JSE has warned shareholders of Mantengu, Visual International, Brikor and Copper 360 that the companies have failed to submit their annual report within the four-month period as stipulated in the JSE Listing Requirements. The companies have until 31 July to submit their financials or face the possible suspension of their shares on the exchange.

Reinet Investments intends to purchase its ordinary shares at market value for
an aggregate maximum amount of €500 million subject to a maximum of 16.5 million ordinary shares over a period up to the 2027 Annual General Meeting of the Company. The implementation will be through several successive and separate programmes and shares will not be cancelled. The Rupert family has declared its intention not to sell any shares during the duration of this Programme. This week Reinet acquired 399,415 shares on the JSE for an aggregate R185,54 million.

Sun International repurchased a total of 5,1 million ordinary shares representing 2% of the issued share capital of the company for a total consideration of R256 million. The shares were acquired at an average price of R50.08 per share.

Hammerson has repurchased 747 ordinary shares from MUFG Corporate Markets at 5 pence per share. The shares will be used to meet obligations arising from its employee share option schemes.

Equites Property Fund has proposed a specific share repurchase of up to 168,596 ordinary shares which will be subject to shareholder approval. The shares will be repurchased from participants of the company’s conditional share plan and will provide participants with a straightforward method of disposing of shares to settle tax liabilities due on vested shares without having to sell them on the open market.

The JSE has repurchased 1,105,477 shares, representing 1.28% of the company’s issued share capital. The shares were acquired over the period 5 to 24 June 2026 for an aggregate R175 million.

Aimia continued with its repurchase programme during June 2026, repurchasing on the open market 165,400 shares at an average $2.79 per share for a total settlement of $461,373.

To reduce the share capital of the company and return capital to shareholders, Quilter commenced, in March 2026, a £100 million share buyback programme. Repurchases to date total £40 million of which £32 million were conducted on the LSE and £8 million were conducted on the JSE. The maximum aggregate purchase price payable by the Company under Tranche 2 is up to C.£30 million. During the period 22 to 26 June 2026, Quilter repurchased 5,431,489 shares on the LSE with an aggregate value of £10,24 million and 1,350,160 shares on the JSE with an aggregate value of R55,40 million.

In June, Greencoat Renewables announced its intention to commence a second tranche of the repurchase programme which will return a further €25m of capital to shareholders, following the completion of the first tranche which is expected during July. The second tranche repurchase will be complete by end-December 2026. This week 1,147,193 shares were repurchased for an aggregate €842,952.

Bytes Technology announced in May 2026 its intention to implement a new share repurchase programme to purchase the company’s shares for an aggregate value of up to £25,0 million. This week the company repurchased 473,637 shares at an average price per share of £3.67 for an aggregate £1,74 million.

In December 2025, British American Tobacco extended its share buyback programme by a further £1.3 billion for 2026. The shares will be cancelled. Over the period 22 to 26 June 2026, the company repurchased a further 597,155 shares at an average price of £45.75 per share for an aggregate £27,52 million.

Ninety One plc announced an increase in the repurchase programme from £30 million to £55 million to be completed by 21 July 2026. The shares, to be purchased on the open market, will be cancelled to reduce the Company’s ordinary share capital. This week the company repurchased a further 1,154,489 ordinary shares at an average price 211 pence for an aggregate £2,44 million.

Anheuser-Busch InBev’s US$6 billion share buy-back programme continues. The shares acquired will be kept as treasury shares to fulfil future share delivery commitments under the group’s stock ownership plans. During the period 22 to 26 June 2026, the group repurchased 519,711 shares for €37,74 million.

During the period 22 to 26 June 2026, Prosus repurchased a further 2,508,852 Prosus shares for an aggregate €94,78 million and Naspers, a further 911,265 Naspers shares for a total consideration of R742,03 million.

Three companies issued profit warnings this week: Bell Equipment, Goldrush and Hudaco Industries.

Five companies issued or withdrew a cautionary notice: Labat Africa, Brikor, Trustco, Mantengu and Combined Motor Holdings.

Who’s doing what in the African M&A and debt financing space?

Plug and Play has invested an undisclosed sum in Kenyan fintech, Lemonade Payments. The company builds modern, compliant infrastructure that makes sending, receiving, and settling payments across Africa faster, simpler, and more affordable.

The Government of Uganda has signed a €110,5 million (US$126,1 million) agreement with Standard Chartered Uganda, to help finance the construction of a road in the country’s northeast region. The road will be built in Karamoja, a remote region in Uganda’s northeast ‌on ⁠the border with Kenya. According to the finance ministry, the road will also help ⁠support ongoing major investments in the region, including a $300 million ⁠cement factory and a $72 million international airport.

Centum Investment Company Plc has sold a 60% stake in Nabo Capital to Rock Investment Bank, cutting its holding to 40%. Nabo will cease to be a Centum subsidiary and become an associate company, with Rock joining as strategic shareholder to support growth in asset management, product expansion and distribution.

Adenia Partners has acquired a majority stake in Minet Group from Capitalworks for an undisclosed sum. Minet provides insurance brokerage, risk advisory, and employee benefits solutions to a diverse base of clients, including corporates, SMEs, and institutions across nine African countries: Botswana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia. Prior to its acquisition by Capitalworks in 2017, Minet was part of Aon, the global insurance broker.

FSD Africa Investments announced a US$1,25 million commitment in iungo Capital, a lender that provides growth financing to small businesses across East Africa. The investment will strengthen iungo’s capital base, enabling it to borrow more and accelerate lending to businesses that struggle to access finance. Operating across Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda, and Tanzania, iungo provides US$-denominated loans of $250,000 on average in a first round, pairing capital with targeted technical assistance to strengthen business performance and support long-term growth.

Oxano Capital has invested in Uganda’s Delta Bee. Through its work with thousands of smallholder beekeepers, the company produces and processes high-quality honey and other bee products while creating sustainable income opportunities for rural communities. Delta Bee has built an integrated business model that combines farmer support, processing, manufacturing of beekeeping equipment, and market access, making it a key player in Uganda’s growing agribusiness sector. Terms of the investment were not disclosed.

Oyass Capital, a sub-fund of FONSIS (Sovereign Fund for Strategic Investments), has announced a CFA 1,3 billion investment in La Ripaille, a Senegalese poultry company. The funding is structured as equity and debt compliant with Sharia law.

African International Schools network, Enko Education, has entered the East African market through the acquisition of Kitengela International Schools (KISC), a group of seven school sections across three campuses in Kenya’s fast-growing Kitengela region. KISC will retain its name, identity, culture, leadership and day-to-day operations. Learners will continue with the same teachers, curricula and school culture.

Beltone Venture Capital, a subsidiary of Beltone Holding, is expanding its investment in Egyptian consumer brands ariika and Lychee. This comes as both companies prepare to grow their presence in Saudi Arabia. ariika, a direct-to-consumer digital-led home furnishing brand, will launch two stores in Riyadh as part of its Saudi expansion. The company already operates across Egypt and Iraq and views the Kingdom as a strategic market for its regional ambitions. Health food and beverage brand Lychee is also expanding into Riyadh with three new outlets. The company said it spent several years studying Saudi consumer preferences before moving forward with the rollout.

Côte d’Ivoire-based Afro Mobile is acquiring a 40% stake in Nigeria’s ISAT Group. The company is preparing to launch an ultra-fast internet service powered by 5G Stand Alone technology. Its aim is to provide high-speed connectivity accessible to all segments of African society, with a particular focus on rural and underserved communities. Afro Mobile also announced that its expansion program will rely on a US$3 billion financing package structured and mobilized by Equiline Finance, providing the capital required to support large-scale infrastructure deployment across multiple markets.

South Africa raises merger thresholds: What it means for your deal

With effect from 1 May 2026, the Department of Trade, Industry, and Competition (DTIC) increased the mandatory merger thresholds and filing fees. It has been almost a decade since the merger thresholds and filing fees were last increased, in an investment climate marked by slow economic growth and regulatory hurdles.

In January 2026, the DTIC proposed new merger notification thresholds and filing fees for public comment. Following the public consultation process, the Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition, Mr Mpho Parks Tau, in consultation with the Competition Commission (Commission), formally amended the Determination of Merger Thresholds.

Since the previous merger thresholds were published in 2017, inflation and business growth have steadily eroded the thresholds filtering function, resulting in smaller transactions becoming notifiable. Consequently, parties to smaller and mid-market deals have borne the cost and delay of legal and economic analysis, filing fees, and protracted approval timelines, often in circumstances where no genuine competition concerns arise. Therefore, the question now is whether these increased thresholds will translate into a materially more efficient merger process, to the benefit of the Commission and transacting parties.

The higher thresholds should result in fewer mandatory notifications, thereby increasing the Commission’s capacity to focus its limited resources on mergers that raise substantive competition or public interest concerns, as well as larger transactions with greater potential to contribute to economic growth. For investors, this signals a meaningful effort to reduce unnecessary regulatory red tape whilst simultaneously safeguarding a competitive market. Coupled with the recent spate of positive initiatives aimed at fostering a more investor-friendly merger control regime in South Africa, including the various guidelines published to clarify the Commission’s approach to internal restructurings, indivisible transactions, and pre-merger consultations between the merger parties and authorities, this is a welcome step in the right direction for mergers and acquisitions in South Africa.

The final amended thresholds and filing fees are set out below. Notably, the target firm threshold for intermediate mergers was increased from the proposed R175m to R200m in the final gazette.

With the new thresholds now in force with effect from 1 May 2026, and having retrospective effect, dealmakers should immediately assess whether transactions in the pipeline are impacted. The retrospective application means that transactions which were entered into before 1 May 2026, but had not yet been notified to the Commission, must be assessed against the new, higher thresholds. In practical terms, this means that a transaction that would previously have triggered a mandatory notification under the former thresholds may now fall below the revised thresholds, with the result that the parties are no longer required to notify. This has the potential to deliver immediate and tangible benefits to transacting parties, both in terms of avoiding the costs associated with the merger filing process, including filing fees, legal and economic advisory fees, and in eliminating the delays inherent in awaiting regulatory approval.

While merger transactions notified after 1 May 2026, in respect of which no decision has yet been made, may technically be withdrawn if they fall below the revised thresholds, the position in practice may be less straightforward. It is possible that the Commission may take the view that it remains seized with the investigation of such matters, particularly where substantive assessment is already underway. Factors that may inform this approach include the administrative complexities associated with refunding filing fees already paid, as well as instances where the Commission has, during its investigation, identified genuine competition or public interest concerns warranting further scrutiny. Transacting parties in this position would have to engage with the Commission directly to obtain clarity on the matter.

Daryl Dingley and Dudu Mogapi are Partners and Gina Lodolo a Senior Associate | Webber Wentzel

This article first appeared in DealMakers, SA’s quarterly M&A publication.

How mezzanine funding is helping to scale South Africa’s medical rehabilitation sector

South Africa’s healthcare system continues to face mounting pressure, with public hospitals stretched, and demand for post-acute and rehabilitation services steadily increasing. As the gap between capacity and need widens, private capital is playing a growing role in scaling essential healthcare infrastructure.

Alternative funding structures, including mezzanine debt, are increasingly used to support mid-market healthcare operators that require flexible growth capital without diluting ownership. In an environment where traditional bank funding may not fully support expansion pipelines, structured capital solutions are proving critical.

Against this backdrop, Tamela Mezzanine Debt Fund I’s investment in Nurture Health demonstrates how well-structured mezzanine funding can accelerate national healthcare expansion while delivering measurable financial and social returns.

In June 2021, Tamela supplied a mezzanine loan facility in support of Nurture Health’s expansion ambition: to become one of South Africa’s largest acute and sub-acute rehabilitation networks.

The group has since grown from 15 to 27 facilities across five provinces, increasing bed capacity to 312,440. This was the result of new facilities built in Alberton, Beacon Bay, Worcester and Montana; six facilities acquired as the result of a merger with a group that has presence in the Western Cape; and two facilities acquired through a 100% acquisition of a group based in Gauteng. A new 54-bed acute physical rehabilitation hospital will open in Mossel Bay in April 2026.

Nurture Health provides sub-acute, post-acute and transitional physical rehabilitation medical care for individuals recovering from injury and disease, as well as patients facing psychiatric and substance abuse challenges – services that are increasingly critical within the broader healthcare ecosystem.

The business was identified by Tamela as a high-quality, defensive growth opportunity in a resilient healthcare sector.

At the time of investment, Nurture Health had an established presence in South Africa’s physical rehabilitation market, with a clear development pipeline. The Tamela team saw growing demand for post-acute and sub-acute care, supported by a scalable platform capable of expanding access while maintaining strong clinical and governance standards.

The funding was structured as growth capital to accelerate new facility rollouts and upgrades, alongside senior debt and internally generated cash flows. Beyond capital, Tamela acted as an observer on the company’s Investment Committee, providing strategic oversight during the expansion phase, and ensuring disciplined capital allocation.

During the investment period, Nurture treated 10,856 patients and maintained a 4.6 out of 5 satisfaction rating from referring doctors and hospitals. Women represented 59% of patients, and the group worked with insurers and state injury funds to reduce financial barriers to access.

Employment impact was also significant, with the workforce growing to 761 employees, including 502 new hires since June 2021. Black women represent 45.2% of the workforce, while women hold 21.05% of leadership roles.

Tamela’s role was seen as key to the growth and development of the Nurture Care Group, firstly through the confidence it displayed by providing the significant funding required to implement the business’s plans.

Secondly, the experience and skill of the Tamela team helped grow the business’s own governance capability and invigorated its journey, transforming from an owner-managed business to a responsible and professional corporate citizen.

Nurture refinanced and repaid Tamela two years ahead of time, delivering returns above the Fund’s 18% target.

Tamela’s funding of Nurture Health is a clear example of how well-structured mezzanine capital can catalyse growth in essential service sectors while delivering measurable social impact.

Lungi Gwente is an Associate | Tamela

This article first appeared in Catalyst, DealMakers’ quarterly private equity publication.

Ghost Bites (Remgro | South32)

In this edition of Ghost Bites:

  • Remgro finalises the Mediclinic restructure
  • South32 gets out of the aluminium sector

Remgro finalises the Mediclinic restructure (JSE: REM)

They are now the 100% owner of Mediclinic Southern Africa

As you may recall, Remgro has been busy executing a transaction to swap the exposure to Mediclinic’s European operations (Hirslanden) for 100% ownership of the Southern African business.

This is because Remgro’s partner in the Mediclinic buyout, MSC Mediterranean Shipping Company, would prefer to own the European assets. Remgro is only too happy to be control the assets in a region they fully understand, so it makes sense for both parties.

The deal has now met all conditions precedent and has been implemented as of 1 July 2026.

They essentially did it as a straight swap that put a baseline value on each region of $950 million. With subsequent balance sheet adjustments, the prices ended up being $947 million for Mediclinic Southern Africa and $1.077 billion for Hirslanden.

Other than loan account movements, Remgro has received a dividend of $130 million to equalise the difference.

Ghost Bite: Focus is a good thing. I don’t think South African investors are overly interested in a Swiss hospital group, so Remgro can now focus on generating strong returns from the Southern Africa business that local investors do actually care about. But what do you think?

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Remgro focuses on local assets

What are your thoughts on this Remgro deal?


South32 gets out of the aluminium sector (JSE: S32)

This transaction makes a lot of sense

South32 certainly kept the wheels of SENS grinding on Wednesday. The company released no fewer than five announcements! A few of them are just administrative in nature, but there are a couple of big ones as well.

I’ll begin with the Sierra Gorda announcement, which confirms that the joint venture will invest in the fourth grinding line project. When this project is eventually commissioned in FY30, it will increase copper equivalent production by around 30% vs. current levels. They also expect a 10% reduction in average operating unit costs.

To get there, the joint venture needs to invest $275 million from FY27 to FY30, with an expected internal rate of return above 20% (subject to copper prices). The profit will be funded from operating free cash flow and joint venture debt facilities.

We then reach the bigger news, which is the sale of aluminium value chain assets to Alcoa for up to $5.6 billion. That’s a chunky number!

The assets in question include Worsley Alumina, Hillside Aluminium, the MRN bauxite mine, the Brazil Alumina refinery and the Brazil Aluminium smelter. Mozal Aluminium is excluded from the transaction, mainly as it is sitting in care and maintenance due to an inability to secure energy at a suitable cost.

Alcoa Corporation is a US-listed company that has deep pockets, so they can afford to part with $3.1 billion in up-front cash for the deal. They will also issue $1 billion in shares to South32. Alcoa will assume $750 million in debt and lease liabilities. Finally, there is a contingent cash consideration of up to $750 million based on alumina and aluminium prices until 2030.

The pricing implies a through-the-cycle EBITDA multiple of 6.8x and an annual average free cash flow multiple of 12.7x. That seems like a strong exit value.

This is a really important deal for South32, as it means that 85% of post-deal EBITDA will be from base and precious metals (copper / zinc / silver / lead). It gives them more balance sheet flexibility to invest in assets like the Taylor project and the aforementioned Sierra Gorda project.

The market certainly liked it, with the share price closing 11.3% higher on the day.

This coincides with the transition in the group CEO role, with Graham Kerr stepping down and Matt Daley taking the role. Daley certainly inherits a more focused strategy than before. The copper story will come through strongly in the next few years.

Ghost Bite: Mining is tricky for many reasons, with an ongoing choice between being a focused producer with choppy earnings vs. a more diversified player with smoother earnings (in theory). But when you have various core assets that need capital at the same time, you have to pick your battles.


Results of previous poll:


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • A non-executive director of ASP Isotopes (JSE: ISO) sold shares in the company worth over R10 million.
    • Three prescribed officers of Alexander Forbes (JSE: AFH) received share awards. Only one them elected partial cash settlement to settle the tax, with the other two choosing full cash settlement. This is equivalent to selling an entire share-based award. The total value across those two officers was nearly R8.8 million (including the taxable portion).
    • A non-executive director of Sibanye-Stillwater (JSE: SSW) bought shares worth R539k.
    • A director of a major subsidiary of Stefanutti Stocks (JSE: SSK) bought shares worth R157k.
    • Here’s an unusual one: an associate of the CEO of Spear REIT (JSE: SEA) sold shares worth R66k. His family has been a net buyer of shares for longer than anyone can remember. Perhaps this is just a blip.
    • If there’s one thing Afrimat (JSE: AFT) doesn’t need right now, it’s clerical sloppiness. I was very surprised to see that a director of the company had sold almost R81k worth of shares at these depressed prices. It turns out that the announcement was wrong and that the director had bought that many shares. That certainly makes more sense.
  • Riskowitz Capital Management recently sent Trustco (JSE: TTO) a Section 189 demand for a shareholders’ meeting. They want shareholders to consider the appointment of a new board of directors. Trustco had no choice but to comply, with the meeting scheduled for 18 August. This shareholder battle has been going on for ages now. Let’s see what happens this time.
  • Powerfleet (JSE: PWR) has announced a share buyback programme of up to $30 million. They will execute this over the next 24 months.
  • Primary Health Properties (JSE: PHP) has refinanced its debt with a new term loan and revolving credit facility to the value of £800 million. This will be used to partially refinance the £1 billion bridging facility obtained by the company to execute the Assura transaction in 2025. The credit margin on the new facilities varies by tranche, but will be on average 40 basis points cheaper than the debt being repaid.
  • In 2025, PPC (JSE: PPC) announced that they were selling land in Zimbabwe that is held by the company’s subsidiary in that country. With a price tag of $30 million, it would be a meaningful cash injection. Alas, despite efforts to save the deal by extending the long stop date, it has now lapsed due to the purchaser’s inability to make payment by the correct date. PPC will still look to sell this land, so new buyers are welcome!
  • The chairperson at Bytes Technology Group (JSE: BYI) is stepping down, having served in that role since the company listed in 2020. Gavin Rochussen will be the new chair, bringing experience in the asset management and family office space to the role. Bytes has been through a horrible period in recent years. Let’s hope things improve for them.
  • Shuka Minerals (JSE: SKA) announced another set of drilling results from the Kabwe Zinc Mine. As usual, it’s all Greek to anyone who isn’t a mining engineer or geologist. It seems like this was a deep hole that has given them a lot of information to plan further drilling. That sounds positive overall.
  • In the naughty corner with late submissions of annual reports, we find Mantengu (JSE: MTU), Visual International (JSE: VIS), Brikor (JSE: BIK) and Copper 360 (JSE: CPR). The JSE has fired a warning shot to these names. If they don’t release by the end of July, their listings may be suspended.
  • Kibo Energy (JSE: KBO) is also late with its financials under the AIM rules in London, but this is because they are negotiating terms for a potential reverse takeover transaction. They will update the market on timelines as soon as possible.

Ghost Bites (Absa | Fortress Real Estate | Gemfields | Harmony | Hudaco | PBT Holdings | Sun International | Sephaku | Resilient | Thungela)

In this edition of Ghost Bites:

  • Absa’s Africa Regions segment is struggling with interest margin
  • Institutional investors were happy to throw money at Fortress Real Estate
  • Gemfields is being severely hurt by its ruby business
  • Harmony achieved production guidance in gold and copper
  • Hudaco had a poor interim period
  • PBT Holdings bucks the trend in consulting
  • Sun International’s recent growth is in line with guidance
  • Métier did the heavy lifting at Sephaku
  • Resilient REIT lives up to its name
  • Thungela was boosted by Transnet Freight Rail in this period

Absa’s Africa Regions segment is struggling with interest margin (JSE: ABG)

The credit loss ratio has helped, but watch that growth in expenses

Absa released a trading update for the six months to June 2026. We’ve now received updates from each of the four large legacy names in banking.

Absa managed low- to mid-single digit growth in revenue, with non-interest revenue (NIR) growing faster than net interest income (NII). That shape is what we are seeing across the sector, as NIR has been a focus area for banks due to its positive impact on Return on Equity (ROE).

The low-single digit growth in NII is a function of margin compression, with rates having come down in key African countries. Loans and deposits grew by mid-single digits.

On the NIR side, insurance and fee income in South Africa did well. Trading income had a strong first quarter and then slowed down, which is a bit of a surprise given the level of volatility we saw in the second quarter.

With operating expenses up by low- to mid-single digits, Absa’s cost-to-income ratio has moved the wrong way. This isn’t encouraging for margins, or for the value that investors are willing to put on Absa’s shares.

The credit loss ratio saved the day here, with flat impairments and thus an improved ratio. This transforms the weak performance in pre-provision operating profit into growth in headline earnings of mid- to high-single digits. It also means that ROE will be similar to the comparable period at 14.8%.

ROE for the full year is expected to be 15%, which is below the company’s expectations due to margin compression in Africa. The strong rand is also not helping their case when earnings are translated from African subsidiaries.

Ghost Bite: Absa is now underperforming Nedbank in 2026. The market wants to see expense growth below income growth, as the credit loss ratio isn’t a high quality way to achieve decent earnings growth. Nedbank has a tighter grip on expenses than Absa at the moment.

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The legacy banks

Which of the legacy banks would you pick now?


Institutional investors were happy to throw money at Fortress Real Estate (JSE: FFB)

And indeed, why not?

As expected, Fortress Real Estate had no trouble raising capital from the market. They initially planned to issue 52 million new shares. Thanks to the level of demand from institutional players, they upsized this to over 55.6 million shares.

Importantly, this was achieved at a discount of only 1% to the 30-day VWAP, so I can see why they happily increased the raise.

To give more context, this raise has increased the number of shares in issue by 4.5%. Fortress has raised R1.35 billion through this process, so that will give them more flexibility in the acquisition and development pipeline.

Ghost Bite: This is exactly why property funds enjoy being listed on the JSE. Being able to raise this kind of money overnight is genuinely incredible when you think about it.


Gemfields is being severely hurt by its ruby business (JSE: GML)

The CEO is out

Gemfields has been through an extremely tough period and things don’t seem to be getting any better.

The company is now parting ways with CEO Sean Gilbertson by mutual agreement. This is usually just a nice way of saying that they want to give someone else a try, with money changing hands to make that happen quickly. David Lovett is stepping up from CFO to interim CEO, having served as CFO for 8 years. Will that promotion stick? Time will tell.

This news accompanied ruby auction results that reflect total revenues of $23.1 million. This auction was in a new format that sits between mixed-quality auctions and the mini-auctions introduced in 2025. This is part of why auctions simply aren’t comparable, as the quality varies and so will the price per carat.

They sold 92.1% of lots offered for sale, which seems like a reasonable outcome.

The broader issues in the ruby business are a significant worry, with grades declining at MRM. The more favourable areas of the mine have been hard to access due to higher rainfall. There are also commissioning issues at the second processing plant.

Overall, these production issues are expected to have a “material adverse impact” on ruby auctions for the rest of the year. This was probably the final straw for the CEO, leading to his replacement.

To make things even worse for the ruby mine in Mozambique, there has been conflict at villages just 15 – 35km away from the mine. They also have a major problem with illegal mining. And as the icing on this terrible cake, they are owed $28.3 million in VAT refunds that aren’t coming through.

Ghost Bite: Mozambique is just a terrible place to do business. It’s as simple as that.


Harmony achieved production guidance in gold and copper (JSE: HAR)

Management is successfully controlling the controllables

Harmony Gold has met its gold production guidance for the 11th consecutive year. For a mining company, that kind of predictability is valuable in the market.

In a trading update for the year ended June 2026, the company also confirmed that they would meet guidance for their all-in sustaining cost in gold. Notably, capital expenditure has come in slightly below plan.

On the copper side, production is towards the upper end of guidance. This helped cash costs come in below guidance. This is the commodity that everybody is talking about of course, with Harmony investing heavily in copper.

The Eva Copper project in Australia is the asset of focus, with the project making considerable progress. There are some environmental hiccups though, with a protected species identified within the project area. They’ve been able to reprioritise workstreams for now, but this might end up causing delays.

Overall, it’s been a solid year of execution at Harmony. Management teams can’t control commodity prices, but they can control how successfully they mine those commodities.

Ghost Bite: Harmony’s share price is almost perfectly flat over 12 months. Commodity price volatility can make the mining sector a cruel place.


Hudaco had a poor interim period (JSE: HDC)

They are taking decisive action with two of their businesses

Hudaco released a trading statement dealing with the six months to May 2026. It’s not good news I’m afraid, with HEPS expected to fall by between 32% and 34%.

The company also reports comparable earnings per share, which strips out discontinued operations and fair value adjustments on vendor liabilities. In that case, earnings would be between 12% and 13% higher.

This tells you that the discontinued operations are a problem, with the announcement giving details on the two businesses that have now been classified as such.

The first is the alternative energy business, which has lost a tremendous amount of value since load shedding disappeared. That sector has become one big price war, leading to unattractive economics for Hudaco. They’ve recognised a R125 million impairment on their inventory. If you want energy backups, it sounds like Hudaco will sell you their products at clearance prices!

The second discontinued operation is the battery bay management and service business within Eternity Technologies. This is a low-margin business that provides products for forklifts, reminding us just how specialised things can get in the industrial sector. This is a particularly sad one, as 90% of the 245 staff members are being retrenched. Management blames the market entry of former staff members who had the support of a key supplier. Such is life in business.

Ghost Bite: This announcement came out after market close, so you can expect some fireworks in the Hudaco share price on Tuesday.


PBT Holdings bucks the trend in consulting (JSE: PBT)

These are good numbers

PBT Holdings released results for the year ended March 2026. The consultancy group put in a solid performance, with revenue up 6.0% and operating profit up 8.3%.

This looks like a solid top-line performance at a time in the world when tough questions are being asked about consulting business models. The group’s efficiency initiatives decreased operating expenses by 9.9%, driving strong improvements to margins alongside the revenue growth.

HEPS was especially impressive with 17.6% growth, but the group also reports normalised HEPS (a safer metric) with 10.8% growth.

The only blemish was cash generated from operations, which dipped by 6.6%. Operating cash can experience these swings based on the exact timing of working capital movements.

The total dividend for the year was up 8.1%.

Ghost Bite: This has been a solid stock over the past 12 months, with a total return of 22% thanks to the high dividend yield.


Sun International’s recent growth is in line with guidance (JSE: SUI)

That’s a good outcome, given the broader disruptions in the world

Sun International hosted a Capital Markets Day in March this year, so the company has nailed its colours to the mast in terms of growth targets and strategy. I always appreciate this, as it allows the market to accurately measure the performance of management.

With interim results due in September, Sun International has provided a brief update on trading performance for the six months to June 2026. Revenue is the only metric covered at this stage, with growth of 6% being in line with guidance.

They’ve also been repurchasing shares, having picked up 2% of issued share capital in the market at an average price of R50.08 per share. The current price is R54, up nearly 40% year-to-date!

Ghost Bite: The casino business has been having a tough time, but there’s more to Sun International than just the traditional casinos. The resorts etc. seem to have done well despite all the disruptions to travel costs from the Middle East conflict.


Métier did the heavy lifting at Sephaku (JSE: SEP)

It’s nice to see the South African operations on the up

Sephaku Holdings reported results for the year ended March 2026.

The financials can be complicated to interpret, as SepCem is accounted for as an associate. In simple terms, this means that Sepcem’s results are brought in as a single line on the income statement, with the detailed line-by-line numbers reflecting Métier as the 100%-owned subsidiary. In other words, if you look at group revenue for example, all you’re actually seeing is Métier.

Group HEPS increased by 20.3% to 37.91 cents. This was firmly thanks to Métier, where net profit after tax increased from R76 million to R107 million as EBITDA margin expanded. SepCem was a drag on performance, with profit down from R43 million to R25 million.

Ghost Bite: The share price has tracked earnings growth, with an increase of 23% over the past 12 months.


Resilient REIT lives up to its name (JSE: RES)

They still expect 9% growth in FY26

Resilient REIT has provided a pre-close update for the six months to June 2026.

In South Africa, retail sales were up by 3.3% for the five months ended May 2026. That’s lighter than we’ve seen at competing funds in South Africa, but Resilient has been busy with major development initiatives at six of its shopping centres. In that context, this is a decent performance.

Reversions were positive 3.2% in South Africa, with escalations agreed at 5.2%. This is the kind of inflation protection that investors are looking for.

In Europe, retail sales at the Spanish property increased by 5.1% for the five months to May. The French portfolio grew 5.0%, a solid performance that is well ahead of the macroeconomic story in the country.

Overall, guidance of at least 9% growth in the distribution for FY26 has been reaffirmed. Shareholders won’t complain about that.

Ghost Bite: The REIT sector is delivering solid growth at the moment, particularly where funds are invested in retail portfolios.


Thungela was boosted by Transnet Freight Rail in this period (JSE: TGA)

No, you didn’t just hallucinate that sentence

Thungela released a pre-close update dealing with the six months to June 2026. During the period, coal prices moved largely in line with the shape of oil and gas prices. In other words, prices rose in response to the Middle East conflict and then moderated.

The Richards Bay benchmark price has lagged the Newcastle benchmark price though, mainly due to weaker buying by Indian customers over the period. An interesting feature of the coal market is that the price will vary depending on where you are shipping from and who the end customers are.

With 6.3Mt of production in South Africa vs. only 2.0Mt at Ensham in Australia, the Richards Bay price is more important to Thungela. It’s a pity that it lagged, but realised prices were still 12% higher (in USD) than the comparable interim period. Alas, thanks to exchange rate movements, the rand price per tonne has actually been identical to the comparable interim period!

This leaves them reliant on export saleable production volumes in South Africa, expected to be slightly down at 6.3Mt vs. 6.4Mt in the comparable interim period. This puts the FOB cost per export tonne slightly above the guided range, as muted production volumes will always lead to higher costs per unit. They expect this to improve in the second half.

There’s one more very important factor: the performance of Transnet Freight Rail. Producing the stuff is one thing, but getting it to the ports is quite another. Thankfully, improvements in rail performance helped Thungela achieve an increase in export sales from 6.6Mt to 7.5Mt.

How lovely is it to read about Transnet actually helping the sector?

At Ensham, export saleable production jumped from 1.6Mt to 2.0Mt. Costs per tonne have come in lower than guidance. Although full-year guidance has been maintained on both production and costs, it’s clearly a strong start to the year in Australia.

On the capital expenditure side, South Africa is expected to be at R600 million for the interim period (R500 million sustaining and R100 million expansionary). Ensham needed R250 million in sustaining capital expenditure during this period. Full year guidance has been affirmed for capex for both countries.

Ghost Bite: The market didn’t love this update, with Thungela down 7.5% on the day. This takes the total return over 12 months to only 11%. Cyclical stocks are tough. I’m just happy to see that Transnet was a positive contributor in this period!


Results of previous poll:


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • One of the founding directors of Discovery (JSE: DSY), Barry Swartzberg, entered into a hedge over R92.5 million worth of shares. This takes the form of a put option with a strike price of R171.23. The current price is R264 per share. There’s no call option, so this is purely downside risk protection. Separately, Adrian Gore had to sell shares worth around R62 million as his hedge matured and call options were triggered. Like Swartzberg, Gore has now entered into a structure that only has downside protection (in his case, at R199.76 per share). Gore’s new hedge is over shares worth around R200 million.
    • A director of Richemont (JSE: CFR) sold share awards worth R41 million. The announcements never even tell you the name of the director, let alone whether this is only the taxable portion or not.
    • A director of Sibanye-Stillwater (JSE: SSW) bought shares worth R7.4 million.
    • Here’s a nice bullish sign for a stock that has been under pressure: a director of Clicks (JSE: CLS) bought shares worth just under R3 million.
    • A director of Trematon (JSE: TMT) bought shares worth R104k. A different director of the company sold shares worth R135k.
    • With the Afrimat (JSE: AFT) share price in the toilet, it’s not helpful that a director has flushed some of his shares away. It might only be a sale worth R81k, but I would far prefer seeing insider buying rather than selling.
  • Vodacom (JSE: VOD) has deepened its exposure to Africa. At the end of 2025, they announced that they wanted to acquire a further 20% in Safaricom in Kenya. It’s taken around six months to get the deal done, with all conditions having now been met. This has allowed Vodacom to acquire 15% in Safaricom from the Government of Kenya and 5% from Vodafone International. The company expects to update the market on medium-term targets before the end of July.
  • Labat Africa (JSE: LAB) is moving ahead with the acquisition of a further 24.45% in Classic International. This will take them to a 100% stake in this technology distribution company. They are paying R27 million for this stake, a number that still makes absolutely no sense in the context of Classic’s profit after tax for the year ended February 2026 of R115.1 million. Labat is basically buying it on a P/E of 1x! They are paying for the acquisition with shares issued at R0.03 per share. Labat remains one of the true mysteries on the JSE. They desperately need to get on with explaining the strategy to the market if they want this share price to reflect the underlying value that appears to be there.
  • Financial results at Nictus (JSE: NCS) only get a mention down in the Nibbles on an otherwise very busy day of news. That’s a pity, as this small cap achieved HEPS growth of 84% for the year ended March 2026! This was despite a decline in revenue of 17.7%. The dividend per share has jumped by 50%. Nictus isn’t as small as it used to be, with the market cap at R160 million after the share price climbed 45% in the past year.
  • Acsion (JSE: ACS) is another name that only gets a passing mention down here today. For the year ended February 2026, revenue was up by 7% and HEPS increased by 23%. The discount to net asset value (NAV) in the share price remains enormous, with a NAV per share of R32.27 vs. the share price at R9.00!
  • Salungano (JSE: SLG) ends up in the Nibbles as well due to low liquidity in the stock. For the year ended March 2026, they saw a substantial jump in EBITDA of over R300 million despite revenue increasing by only R100 million. The magic happened in gross profit, which was up by around R300 million – an increase that carried through into EBITDA. HEPS increased spectacularly from 2.62 cents to 50.85 cents.
  • After selling its specialty chemicals company, Aimia (JSE: AIM) has used roughly half of the proceeds to repurchase Senior Notes worth $131.4 million. The remaining $137 million will be used for share repurchases, working capital and potential investments.
  • Shuka Minerals (JSE: SKA) is still in the exploration phase, so their financial statements don’t reflect any revenue. It’s completely normal to see losses in this phase, with the operating loss having come in at £884k for the year ended December 2025.
  • Kore Potash (JSE: KP2) is still flirting with potential buyers of the company. At one point there was only one party still interested, but a second party joined the fray in June. Competitive tension is critical in a process like this.
  • Zeder’s (JSE: ZED) disposal of Zaad is taking longer than expected thanks to regulatory approvals. This is a common issue in large transactions. To allow for this, the long stop date has been extended to 30 November 2026.
  • Sebata Holdings (JSE: SEB) has been catching up on its financial reporting. They’ve now released their interims for the six months to September 2025, reflecting a swing from a headline loss per share of 0.13 cents to positive HEPS of 3.26 cents. The company can now apply to the JSE for the lifting of its suspension, with the FY26 results needing to be released soon as well.
  • In case you’re following Rex Trueform (JSE: RTO) or related company African and Overseas Enterprises (JSE: AOO), then be aware that the service level agreement with GMS (the CEO’s entity) is being renewed. This is obviously a related party deal that is accompanied by a fairness opinion by an independent expert.

Ghost Bites (ACOF | Argent Industrial | Fortress Real Estate | Goldrush | Invicta | Lighthouse Properties | Naspers/Prosus | SA Corporate Real Estate)

In this edition of Ghost Bites:

  • ACOF, the best part of Africa Bitcoin Corporation, is making progress
  • Decent growth at Argent Industrial
  • Fortress taps the market for capital
  • Goldrush battles disruption from online gambling
  • Invicta could do with a boost from South Africa
  • Lighthouse Properties is doing well in Europe
  • Prosus has grown free cash flow significantly
  • SA Corporate Real Estate is generating real growth for investors

ACOF, the best part of Africa Bitcoin Corporation, is making progress (JSE: BAC | JSE: BACC)

They are plugging an important gap for SMEs

I’ve made no secret of my appreciation of what they are trying to build at the Altvest Credit Opportunities Fund. Access to funding is critical for SMEs in South Africa. The banks really aren’t great at lending into this space, so any effort to address that should be applauded.

The rates need to be high due to the default risk, with the ACOF book running at an average of prime+7.8%. But for an SME that needs inventory or a shop fit-out, the potential returns are vastly higher than this effective interest rate. This is why a lack of access to funding can be so frustrating.

In an update for the quarter ended May 2026, ACOF confirmed that their average loan size is R6.2 million and that they currently have 45 funded SMEs. Alongside the average term of 43 months, that gives you an idea of how they operate.

There’s no shortage of demand for loans at these levels, with the fund reducing its cash balance from R156 million to R80 million based on deployments. They cannot possibly achieve profitability without having a large book out there working for them and earning a return, so deployments are key.

The outstanding loan book balance at 31 May 2026 was R338 million.

The provision for bad debts is 3.77% of the current loan book, an improvement from 4.12% as at February 2026. This shows you why the interest rates need to be higher than secured consumer debt. ACOF needs to cover the credit losses, the cost of its funding (e.g. its DMTN programme) and its operating expenses.

The security coverage ratio across the loan book is between 1.5x and 2.6x. Even at ACOF, it’s very hard to borrow money as an entrepreneur if you don’t have assets as security. Skin in the game is critical.

And in other news from the group, Africa Bitcoin Corporation (the holding company) is pursuing a listing on the Aquis Growth Market in London. They are calling all pockets in terms of potential access to capital.

Ghost Bite: ACOF is the part of the group that I think is most interesting. I just hope they can scale to profitability in time.


Decent growth at Argent Industrial (JSE: ART)

But they could do with more leverage

Argent Industrial’s results for the year ended March 2026 reflect decent growth overall. Revenue was up 7.7%, EBITDA was good for 9.5% growth and HEPS increased by 9.1%. Dividend per share growth crept into the double digits, up 11%.

It’s a good outcome for shareholders, but there’s not much leverage in a business that only grows HEPS by 9.1% based on revenue growth of 7.7%.

The modest level of debt also results in return on equity of just 14.2%, which doesn’t feel exciting enough for this industry.

Looking at the segmentals, the Manufacturing area of the business achieved revenue growth of 11.9% and profit before tax growth of 16.6%.

This strong performance was dragged down by the Steel Trading segment, which saw revenue fall by a nasty 20%. This was severe enough to put that segment in a loss-making position of R11 million (vs. profit of R6. million in the prior year).

From a geographical perspective, the group’s South African operations grew profit before tax by 8.3%. The local operations contribute only 27% of group profit before tax, showing you the extent to which Argent has built offshore operations. The offshore business grew profit before tax by 13.3%.

Argent’s share price has jumped by 35% in the past year, giving shareholders a total return (including dividends) of 41%.

Ghost Bite: On a P/E of 6.8x, Argent Industrial is one of the many South African companies that is trading at a low multiple. The earnings growth looks fine in that context. They have a particularly strong balance sheet that could probably absorb more risk, so let’s see what route they take going forwards.


Fortress taps the market for capital (JSE: FFB)

They want to fund their development pipeline

Fortress Real Estate announced an accelerated bookbuild of approximately 52 million new shares, or 4.3% of shares in issue. This would raise around R1.3 billion at current share prices, with the pricing of the bookbuild to be established through the process run by the bookrunners.

This is one of those invite-only capital raises, so only institutional investors would’ve received their phone calls and emails on Monday evening.

The capital isn’t needed for a specific acquisition. Instead, Fortress is looking to bulk up its war chest for a variety of purposes. This includes expansion of the South African retail portfolio, as well as development of the logistics portfolio in South Africa as well as Central and Eastern Europe.

They have a development pipeline of roughly R5.2 billion. They plan to execute over the next three to five years. The non-core portfolio that they are looking to dispose of is worth around R2.5 billion. This leaves a hole that needs to be plugged through a combination of equity and debt.

Ghost Bite: It’s a pretty sound rationale, as the idea is to have the cash available to prevent rushed sales of non-core assets to fund the development pipeline. I can’t fault that. I’m quite sure that Fortress will have no problem raising the funding.


Goldrush battles disruption from online gambling (JSE: GRSP)

How important will the lottery licence be for this group?

Goldrush released results for the year ended March 2026. Revenue was flat and HEPS dropped sharply from 141.91 cents to 54.47 cents. The group reported a swing in fortunes from an operating profit of R243 million to an operating loss of R425 million.

Importantly, cash generated from operations was R287 million. This is down 27% year-on-year due to the investment required in equipment on behalf of Sizekhaya, the consortium that won the South African lottery licence.

The group is still generating cash, but earnings have clearly moved in the wrong direction.

The proliferation of online gambling is to blame here, with immense competition to attract customers on their smartphones. This has changed the game in this market, as licence holders in the brick-and-mortar space (like bingo halls etc.) cannot rely on sensible geographical exclusivity to compete.

A good analogy would be the pharmacy industry, if online pharmacy suddenly became prolific. Community and traditional pharmacy groups would find themselves competing against online behemoths with marketing budgets that benefit from scale and entirely different margins. You can imagine how that would end.

Goldrush’s shareholder letter has the kind of transparency that you won’t usually see in corporate settings, with a detailed explanation of how online betting has impacted the industry in recent years. The management team acknowledges that this has reduced the value of all gambling licences, including theirs.

The bigger question of course is around where things will settle. Management quotes a statistic that 69% of gambling revenue is now online, with land-based options scrambling for the remaining 31%. Land-based won’t go to zero, but just how low might it go over time?

Goldrush has an online business which grew revenue by 22% to R292 million. The problem is that total group income was R1.95 billion, so online is a small part of the overall story.

The lottery will be an important defensive underpin for the group in years to come. Although there is still a legal challenge around the award of the licence, previous court judgments have been favourable for Sizekhaya (and thus Goldrush).

Ghost Bite: There’s all to play for, literally. The lottery infrastructure has been put in place ahead of time and below budget, so that’s a good sign. The 2027 financial year is going to be critical for Goldrush, as the economics of the lottery licence should become visible to the market (for better or worse).


Invicta could do with a boost from South Africa (JSE: IVT)

The pressure on local industry is permeating many value chains

Invicta is one of those positions in my portfolio that I’ve learnt to just leave alone to do its thing. With a total return over 3 years of 45%, the group is doing a great job of delivering returns.

This doesn’t mean that every period looks good, with HEPS up by just 1% for the year ended March 2026. Importantly, the group reports sustainable HEPS growth of 7%.

Naturally, any management-specific view on earnings should be treated with caution. Invicta gives a thorough breakdown of the adjustments to arrive at sustainable HEPS, many of which relate to accounting adjustments on acquisitions and asset disposals.

Despite the growth in sustainable HEPS, this will go down as a tough year for Invicta. Revenue was up just 4%, which was nowhere near enough to offset the 10% increase in expenses. Operating profit fell by 9% and EBITDA was down 7%.

Digging into the segmental performance, the Industrial Solutions and Parts segment saw revenue dip by 1.7% and sustainable operating profit before forex movements fall by 10%. Return on net operating assets came down sharply from 19.3% to 16.5%. With 77% of revenue generated in South Africa, the general pressure on the local economy in areas like steel has filtered through to Invicta.

At Capital Equipment and Parts, revenue jumped by 19.1%, yet sustainable operating profit before forex movements dipped by 2.5%. Return on net operating assets also declined slightly from 15.7% to 14.5%. This business only generates 52% of its revenue from South Africa.

As is usually the case, Invicta has been busy with various acquisitions and disposals. The big one in this period was the acquisition of Spaldings in the UK for £10.5 million.

Ghost Bite: Invicta trades on a mid-single digit P/E. Nobody is expecting them to generate double-digit growth in HEPS. It would certainly be nice to see the local situation in South Africa improve and boost Invicta, but I’ll let management allocate my small amount of capital in this stock accordingly.


Lighthouse Properties is doing well in Europe (JSE: LTE)

France has been a particular highlight of recent trading

Lighthouse Properties released a pre-close update for the six months to June 2026. This is a European-focused fund, so get ready to read about places you would probably want to visit on holiday.

The update uses the numbers for the first quarter of the year (i.e. to March 2026), which are quite outdated. I guess it’s better than nothing.

For that quarter, tenant sales were up by 7.9% and footfall was up 2.4%. Vacancies were just 1.4%. This is what a successful retail portfolio looks like.

Spain led the way with sales growth of 8.6% for the quarter, an acceleration from 5.9% in FY25. Next up was Portugal at 7.0%, admittedly a slowdown vs. 8.2% in FY25. Even France showed strong growth of 6.5%, a significant jump from just 2.3% in FY25.

The performance in France isn’t because of the macroeconomic environment in that country. In fact, it’s despite the macro story. Lighthouse got some important leases across the line, achieving solid growth in income despite the vacancy rate sitting at 5.7% (by far the highest in the portfolio).

Lighthouse has reaffirmed the FY26 distribution guidance of 2.95 EUR cents per share, which implies anticipated growth of 6.9% vs. FY25.

Ghost Bite: I’m sure Des de Beer can’t wait to buy more shares once the interim results are released!


Prosus has grown free cash flow significantly (JSE: PRX)

And at Naspers (JSE: NPN), Takealot achieved its maiden profit

Prosus is the name that the group seems to be focusing on, so I’ll spend most of my energy there as well.

These results must be read against the backdrop of the Tencent share price having shed a third of its value year-to-date in USD terms, dragging Prosus (and Naspers) down with it.

To break this strong correlation, Prosus needs to convince the market that there is material value in the rest of the group.

Group revenue jumped by 57%, but acquisitions played a major role here. Strip them out and you’ll find 12% growth in revenue in local currency. That’s not exactly eye-watering growth, sadly.

Thankfully, the benefit of having moved through the inflection point for profitability is being seen at adjusted EBITDA level. This metric was up 44% in local currency (excluding acquisitions). This is the hockey stick that investors often talk about in platform businesses.

Another critical metric is free cash flow, coming in at $1.5 billion including the Tencent dividend. If you take out that dividend, the rest of the group generated free cash flow of $275 million vs. just $18 million in FY25. That’s an encouraging sign for investors in the group (like me).

The challenge Prosus faces is that the Latam ecosystem is dealing with immense competition, so they need to up the marketing spend to maintain their market position. This doesn’t do great things for short-term profitability, so look out for that in the next period.

In Europe, they took on the brave task of trying to turn Just Eat Takeaway.com (JET) into a growth asset in a region that is practically allergic to innovation. After shrinking for four years before the Prosus acquisition, JET is expected to return to revenue growth by the end of the year. Europe is also where you’ll find the OLX classifieds business, a solid contributor in terms of adjusted EBITDA margins (up 800 basis points to 48%).

In China, Tencent is dealing with the difficulties plaguing many tech assets at the moment: concerns around AI.

AI is core to the entire group these days, with Prosus working hard to convince the market that this is going to create value across the ecosystems. Time will tell.

Looking at Naspers, which is basically Prosus plus some rats and mice, Takealot grew revenue by 18% in local currency. Takealot achieved their first-ever annual profit, showing you just how long it takes to scale to profitability. With Amazon starting to scale in South Africa, I am not convinced that annual profits are guaranteed at Takealot.

Ghost Bite: I remain long here, as Prosus plugs an important gap in my portfolio around ex-US tech. But they certainly aren’t immune to the intoxicating mix of AI threats and opportunities that are a feature of the global tech sector.

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The Prosus investment case

Do you see value in Prosus beyond Tencent?


SA Corporate Real Estate is generating real growth for investors (JSE: SAC)

Part of the portfolio is buy-to-let at scale – and it’s working

SA Corporate Real Estate has delivered a pre-close update for the six months ending June 2026. They use April 2026 metrics where appropriate, as the period obviously hasn’t ended yet.

Overall, distributable income per share is expected to increase by between 6% and 7% for the interim period. For the full year, they expect growth of between 5% and 7%.

In the retail portfolio, vacancies have ticked up from 2.3% to 2.9%. Reversions are expected to be positive 1.5%, up from 1.1% in December 2025. Rolling 12-month trading density is a concern, down from 6.2% in December 2025 to 4.8% in April 2026. The vacancy rate needs to be managed carefully as well.

On the industrial side, they have no vacancies at all. This isn’t unheard of in the industrial space, particularly when a portfolio is focused on large buildings and tenants. The challenge is that this creates a lumpy profile, so vacancies can hit hard if they do come through. For now though, the fund enjoys a fully-let portfolio.

In residential, the vacancy rate is down from 3.6% to an anticipated 3.1% by June. They expect to achieve rental increases of 4.3% vs. 4% in December 2025. This is the opposite to the industrial portfolio in terms of lumpiness, as a residential portfolio is split across many tenants.

In Zambia, improved performance at the Arcades Mall means that the fund expects 7% growth in the distributable income from that country (measured in USD).

On the balance sheet, the loan-to-value (LTV) has come down from 42.1% in December 2025 to 41.8% in April 2026. There are no further debt expiries this year. 68.3% of the debt is hedged at a tenor of 2.9 years.

Asset disposals are focused on the residential portfolio, with R709 million in transfers year-to-date. Another R743 million will transfer by the end of July, with a further R182 million in conditional disposals this year. They are selling the properties at a 32.7% premium to book and a 63.3% premium to acquisition price!

They are also looking to development opportunities, so don’t make the mistake of thinking this is one-way traffic in terms of disposals.

Ghost Bite: SA Corporate Real Estate s up 15% over 12 months. The total return including dividends is 24%. Do the maths and compare this to that buy-to-let investment that you felt was such a good idea. I’ll stick to buying REITs, thanks!


Results of previous poll:


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • Here’s an interesting one: the founder of Optasia (JSE: OPA), Bassim Haidar, got back on the bid for the shares. With the share price under immense pressure, he bought shares worth R23.7 million at a VWAP of R14.24 per share. You may recall that he previously sold R1.5 billion in shares at R20 per share! The CEO of the company joined him on the bid, buying shares worth R7.3 million. Will it be enough to stop the falling knife? Optasia is down 31% year-to-date.
    • The CEO of AVI (JSE: AVI) was awarded shares in the company and sold the whole lot for R15.9 million.
    • Acting through Titan Fincap Solutions, Dr Christo Wiese bought another R4.3 million worth of Brait Exchangeable Bonds (JSE: BIHLEB). This is relevant to holders of Brait ordinary shares (JSE: BAT).
    • Most of the director dealing at Ninety One (JSE: NY1 | JSE: N91) happens in the form of employee trusts. In an unusual example, a director and his associate bought shares worth roughly R2.1 million.
    • An independent non-executive director of Nedbank (JSE: NED) sold shares worth R38k.
  • MAS (JSE: MSP) announced that PKMI Limited is looking to increase its controlling stake in the company. PKMI has launched a bid to shareholders to acquire up to 30 million MAS shares. If successful, this would increase the stake from 61.3% to 65.7%.
  • Heriot REIT (JSE: HET) got the green light from shareholders for the issuance of shares to related parties. This allows them to move ahead with the Heriot family injecting more assets into the REIT.
  • In case you understand what it means when a mineralised interval consists primarily of blebby to disseminated bornite and chalcopyrite in norite, then be aware that Orion Minerals (JSE: ORN) has released more drilling results. The non-geologists among us just skip through to the CEO commentary, where Tony Lennox seems very happy with the drilling results from the Okiep Copper Project.
  • As the chairman of Raubex (JSE: RBX) is the ex-CEO of the group and thus not deemed to be independent, the company needs a Lead Independent Director. Setshego Bogatsu is stepping down from that role (having been in it since 2022), with Nosisa Fubu named as her replacement.
  • I’m not sure if we can read much into this at Numeral (JSE: XII), but the company has appointed a non-executive director who has extensive experience in industrial assets in South Africa. Perhaps that’s a clue as to their future plans?
  • Trustco (JSE: TTO) has renewed the cautionary announcement related to its potential delisting. This has been going on for a while now.

Ghost Stories #107: The real risk is playing it “safe”

Listen to the show using this podcast player:

Volatility feels like risk. The daily noise, the red screens, the uncomfortable drawdowns – these are the stress points for investors. This is what might keep you out of the market altogether.

But what if the real risk was avoiding the markets over the long-term, rather than managing the bumps along the way?

In this episode, Satrix CIO Kingsley Williams joins The Finance Ghost to unpack one of the most powerful (and misunderstood) truths in investing: playing it safe may be the riskiest strategy of all. “Over-saving” and “under-investing” can severely damage a long-term wealth creation journey.

In this episode:

  • Why volatility is uncomfortable, but not the risk you should fear most
  • The concept of opportunity cost risk and how it destroys long-term returns
  • How time in the market reduces the probability of capital loss
  • Why equities remain the most reliable long-term hedge against inflation
  • The critical difference between saving and investing (and why it matters)

This podcast was first published here

Transcript:

The Finance Ghost: Welcome to the Ghost Stories podcast, and I’m looking forward to speaking to Kingsley Williams today. He is the CIO at Satrix. He is certainly no stranger to the Ghost Mail audience. We’ve spoken to Kingsley many times before on Ghost Stories podcasts.

Today, we are going to talk about the risk of playing it safe. Isn’t that a fun topic?

And that’s because volatility is what we feel every day in the markets, and certainly, the first part of this year would definitely fall into that category of being volatile. The reality is that over the long term, it’s actually inflation that hurts us, not so much the volatility.

So, Kingsley, thank you for joining me to talk about what I think is quite a tough mindset shift for investors, actually, as they learn to deal with market volatility. I think you’re going to really give us some excellent context, on just how important this stuff is long term.

Kingsley Williams: Yeah, really great to be speaking to you again, Ghost. And it’s very, very important that we keep in mind what we’re ultimately investing for. Whether that be retirement, your kids’ university education, whatever that long-term goal might be.

Investing, in my mind, is inherently a long-term endeavour. As opposed to saving, which typically has a shorter-term horizon. Investing is also inherently a risky endeavour. The objective is to grow your capital in excess of inflation. If that isn’t your objective, all you’re doing is saving and trying to keep pace with inflation. In other words, having the same purchasing power tomorrow, next year, etcetera, as you would have today.

So I think it’s important to frame what we mean by investing and some of the assumptions that underpin that.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, absolutely. One of the statements that you made to me in the prep for this podcast is that the greatest risk is not taking any risk. And that’s such a powerful statement that I think it really does deserve to be unpacked properly.

I’m keen for you to walk us through exactly what you mean by that. Especially for investors who do tend to be cautious and put their money in money market accounts, even when that investor is quite young, and maybe they actually have enough in the way of emergency savings. 

You’ve already alluded to the importance of saving versus investing. These are two different things, but I think there are a lot of people who over-save and under-invest (perhaps the best way I can describe it).

Kingsley Williams: One of the key concepts, the simple but most profound concept that I learned when I was doing my investment studies, is that of investment term.

This concept was clarified when I was actually doing some elective units at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Just as an aside, how do you know someone has an MBA? (laughs) They’re going to tell you, right? They’re going to tell you.

Just to be clear, I didn’t study full-time at that university or graduate there, but I did have the very fortunate opportunity to spend three months on an exchange programme through Wits Business School, which is where I did my MBA.

The University of Chicago Booth School of Business is the top finance school in the world. It was when I did it. I’m sure it’s still right up there. There are many Nobel laureates who have their professorship there, etc. Phenomenal opportunity for anyone wanting to get exposure to that side of the world. I digress a little bit.

But you touched on it at the beginning in terms of how we often look at volatility, or standard deviation, or variance as our primary measure of risk. And I think that’s because it’s a relatively easy-to-quantify and understand measure. It’s a measure of the bumpiness of the ride. 

But it doesn’t really tell you what investors probably care more about, and that’s ultimately the risk of loss. And we can talk more about that. There’s another key risk as well, which is the opportunity cost risk, which is not taking enough well-rewarded risk.

I’ll come back to those two key risks, which I think is what investors should probably think more about rather than volatility in and of itself.

So one of the things to recognise with investing is that it is very difficult to quantify what the actual return for a particular asset class may be over a given period. There’s a lot of estimation risk associated with that. Are equities going to go up 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25% over the next 12 months, or even deliver a negative return? 

Yes to all of the above, and in no particular order, right? Any one of those outcomes could potentially happen because there are some known variables that could drive what that return outcome could be, but there are also a lot of unknown or unpredictable variables that also influence that final return.

And even with those known variables that are going to drive what an equity return is over a medium- to long-term period, there are a lot of unknown events that could affect those known variables.

It’s a lot of unknown unknowns, that can ultimately influence your long-term return!

So how on earth does one end up deciding what to invest in? Well, an interesting thing happens when you start expanding your time horizon, because you start getting a little bit more certainty around what is more likely to transpire than when you look over a relatively short period (even over 12 months).

One of the other things that we do when we do this exercise of looking at asset class returns is you could look at a long period, say like 10 years, but we don’t just pick one period, because in that one 10-year period there would have been a lot of macro and geopolitical factors at play that would have influenced the returns for that particular 10-year period.

So you want to look at lots of 10-year periods, all of the 10-year periods over a longer horizon, say over a 20-year period or 25-year period. Then you start getting an indication of what the average return is over all 10-year periods over that 25-year period.

And you could even argue that even that 25-year period is not really long enough, because even that 25-year period is going to be shaped by macroeconomic and geopolitical phenomena, that shape the returns of various asset classes over that timeframe.

The reality is, you start running into the accessibility of data and comparability of different asset classes. We’ve gone back about 25 years, but you could very much make the argument that that’s not even long enough. 

You start getting what becomes more typical for the different asset classes, even over that period. Because it’s corroborated by other research that other academics have done over the centuries even, which shows that basically equities are going to be your best performing asset class over the long term.

Let’s just delve in a little bit, into what we see over a shorter period, if you hold a particular asset class like local equities. So even over a 25-year period, while that’s relatively short, if you think about your total investment journey, it might only be half of the period of time that you’re saving for. Let’s say you have a 40-year period of time that you’re investing for.

Even though 25 years is relatively short, we have experienced some significant market events over that period. The dot-com crash, the global financial crisis, and obviously, more recently the COVID lockdown, how markets responded to that. 

There’ve been lots of other market regimes historically that wouldn’t be in that 25-year investment horizon, but there have been enough shocks to the system for us to stress test what is likely to happen should we have the next shock, whatever that might be.

What we see is that the longer you hold a particular asset class, for example, local equities, the risk of capital loss starts to decline. So, for example, if we look at all rolling three-year periods, local nominal bonds have not experienced any capital loss on a total return basis. In other words, that means by reinvesting your coupon income. 

While for local equities, you have on average lost between 5% to 10% of your capital, 5% of the time. So 95% of the time you’ve made a gain, but for 5% of the time, if you look at all rolling three-year periods, you run the risk of losing somewhere between 5% to 10% of your capital on a three-year holding period basis.

When you start looking at that data, you quickly recognise that you probably need to be holding local equities for at least a 10-year period to be assured, assuming history repeats itself, that you’re never going to lose capital. Because that’s certainly been the case if we look at the historical data. 

You haven’t lost any money if you’ve been holding local equities on a total return basis for a 10-year period. The risk of capital loss is zero. That’s certainly what has transpired historically over that 25-year period.

The question that we then need to answer is, why would I hold equities if bonds are that much safer? And I think this speaks very much to that second risk, that opportunity cost risk.

Let’s expand our horizon to, say, 10-year periods. And we look at all rolling 10-year periods. Local nominal bonds have delivered, on average, approximately a 9% return per annum; whereas local equities have delivered, on average, roughly a 12% return per annum. So, a whole 3% more than what nominal bonds have done.

So both have outperformed inflation, which is great, but there is a real opportunity cost there of not taking additional risk in equities if you have time on your side. So if you have a 10-year investment horizon, why would you care how bumpy the journey is? Because if you’re going to take a smoother, safer route, that’s ultimately going to cost you 3% per annum.

Your listeners should all be very aware of that eighth wonder of the world that’s often attributed to Einstein, of compounding. Basically, he said that those who understand compounding earn it, while those who don’t pay it. 

 It’s  in dispute whether he actually said it. I’m sure it’s accredited to him to add gravitas to the point. Whether he did or didn’t say it is up for debate, but the point is it’s no less powerful, right?

You want to take advantage of that 3% per annum compounding, because over a 10-year period that results in a massive difference in final value, which is ultimately what you’re solving for. So if you’re investing for the long term, you want to make sure you maximise the potential return. 

Because the bumpiness that you incur along the way is almost a moot point if you know that, with a high degree of probability, you’re going to lock in a materially higher return over that time horizon.

The Finance Ghost: That couple of hundred basis points excess is how careers are made and lost when it comes to active asset management, right? It makes a big difference.

The difference between the rockstar fund manager and just another normal, “average” fund manager can literally be 100 or 200 basis points over a long time. That makes someone a household name, quite literally. The compounding makes an enormous difference.

You’ve talked about the bumpy ride a few times. It’s like if you’re going on this dream trip, you’re going on this wonderful around-the-world story, a little bit of bumpiness on the plane doesn’t detract from how wonderful the end result is.

If you’re going on a short drive around the corner to the shops, you’re going to be irritated by something wrong with your car, and it’s very bumpy. But if you’re going on this big, long-term, exciting journey, then you’ll be willing to have some of the turbulence.

And that’s what investing is: the big around-the-world trip. That’s basically how important it is and how big the reward is if you get it right.

The other thing that you’ve raised there, which I think is important, is that yes, we have these market crashes, we have these issues that come through, but again, if you look over these 10-year periods, you let these cycles play out – ironically, if you’re early in your career, you actually want markets to crash so that you can buy more at relatively cheap prices.

Technically speaking, that’s what you want. What you don’t want is to be investing in really hot markets. That’s the big mistake that people make, right? They don’t necessarily up their investing when they can, when things are hard.

We’ve seen some of that now with some of the big tech names, etc, off 20%, 25%, 30% or more. That’s the time, actually. Not just blindly, you know, do the research etcetera, but it’s the old story – when everyone else is scared of the market, that’s the time to be thinking about upping your allocation.

Kingsley Williams: 100%. Investing is, as I mentioned at the beginning, risky, intrinsically. These market corrections and crises that happen from time to time (and even if we want to use the word bubbles, which happen from time to time), are features of investing. You were chatting to one of my colleagues this week as well, and talking about that very point.

The Finance Ghost: I was about to say Nico is going to shout at you for using the word bubble. [Laughs].

Kingsley Williams: Yeah, yeah. The exuberance that we see in certain sectors of the market at different times is actually what encourages the investment into those speculative new-generation technologies, for example. Which makes it attractive. That avails the capital to make investing in these new technologies worthwhile.

If there wasn’t that excitement, no one would invest in it because it wouldn’t have the potential upside returns that are promised. But yeah, does the market get greedy and get ahead of itself? Sure. Is there excess fear which results in a sharp correction? That also happens.

And these are well-known features, but what you have on your side is time. And as you give time to the equation, those bumps along the road actually become distant memories. And yes, as painful as they are when you experience them in the moment, it’s amazing how quickly we forget. 

And as the market recovers, it reaches new highs, because that’s what it’s meant to do. It’s not a bug when you have corrections or bubbles; they’re more of a feature.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, absolutely. And the other thing that’s a feature is inflation, right?

And we’re seeing it come through now from listed companies, seeing it more and more in the SENS announcements that I read every day. Inflation is here. This oil price spike is going to drive inflation throughout the system. And obviously inflation, like any other macroeconomic concept, has cycles. So there are times of higher inflation, and there are times of lower inflation.

And so you’ve got to then distinguish between, well, what am I investing in, very long term, then maybe you don’t care too much about where we are in an inflation cycle – those who have more of a medium-term view will need to think carefully about that.

What would be, if I can call it the “wrong” exposure to have too much of in an environment where you’ve got higher inflation, you’ve maybe got interest rates that are going to be higher for longer as well? What would be the classic mistakes that people would be making in that environment?

Kingsley Williams: Markets will adjust to the inflation level at any given point in time, whether it’s low, medium, or high. But what I would say is one of the biggest risks for safer investments, particularly bonds, is actually inflation, but specifically inflation surprises. So it’s the change in inflation. 

Because the bonds will be priced on an assumption of what inflation is likely to be over whatever investment horizon you’re looking at, whatever the duration of those bonds are that you’re holding. But if the inflation dynamics change and those assumptions are now no longer valid, in other words, you face an inflation surprise, that’s where bonds are super sensitive.

This is also where you can get quite hurt by playing it safe, in an asset class that is supposedly safe, like bonds. If there’s a subsequent shock and surprise to that, that’s where you can get really hurt because those bonds are going to recalibrate.

There are other factors that affect bonds, like default risk and credit rating, ability to meet future payments, etc. But inflation’s the big one, particularly for government debt, which is less exposed to that default risk.

But to answer your question as well, equities are a great long-term hedge for inflation. If you think about it, companies will ultimately pass on inflationary increases to their customers. So as long as the business remains viable, and it can compete within its industry and its sector, they’re going to be hedging against inflation by passing on those increases to counteract the effect of inflation on their costs, revenue, and profitability.

Higher-for-longer inflation is therefore not a problem per se. Obviously, it does generally correspond with a higher risk-free capital rate, which affects equity valuations. But I think the bigger risk is an inflation surprise, as that upsets the real return expectations.

Businesses can adjust if they have a common understanding of what the expectations for inflation are likely to be. Because that gets baked into the system and they price accordingly.

Within equities, at Satrix we tend not to make calls on different sectors, as there are a lot more variables within a particular sector to now consider one sector versus another, and therefore more known and unknown surprises to those expectations.

So we would rather look at broad asset classes in terms of where we want to position our portfolios, particularly our balanced funds.

But if we come back to real returns, so in other words returns in excess of inflation, this is ultimately why we invest, right? That’s what we’re trying to solve for. We want to deliver a return in excess of inflation. It’s important for investors not to lose sight of that when looking at their returns in the longer term.

It’s the return in excess of inflation, and giving appropriate time for that investment to appreciate in excess of inflation, which is ultimately what investors should be solving for, and why they invest in the first place. Not to protect capital or merely keep pace with inflation.

And the key ingredient that unlocks that is the appropriate amount of time in relation to the asset class that you’re investing in. Equities are a great long-term hedge against inflationary effects for the reasons that I mentioned earlier. But beware, while bonds appear safe, inflation is the big Achilles’ heel that can trip them up.

So you can play it safe, but actually, you can have a big risk if there is an inflation shock to the system, like we’re experiencing at the moment.

The Finance Ghost: Kingsley, you’ve raised a lot of important risks there around bond investing. And I always remind people that it’s called fixed income, not fixed returns. Two very, very different things.

You’re not going to get a fixed return from a bond because the traded value can and will move around based on the income it’s paying in relation to what’s going on from a macroeconomic perspective. So, always something important to keep in mind.

We’ve talked a lot about how time in the market is really important. The old story: you get a good return from equities by hanging around for a long time. But if you’re not diversified, then that may not hold true.

So it is very important to make sure that you are playing the game from a diversification perspective. Because if you’re going to go and own two or three or four different stocks, or you go and own 20 stocks with exactly the same underlying fundamentals, then that’s not diversification, and there is no guarantee whatsoever that you will do well or that you will make excess returns or anything of the sort.

And obviously, ETFs like the ones offered by Satrix do make that a lot easier. But what makes it a lot harder is that global indices are not as diversified as we might like. If you are buying a market cap-weighted index, you’re not necessarily getting that diversification because of the way the world has gone, where so much value is now concentrated in a relatively small pool of companies and sectors like tech, for example.

So how do investors actually go about addressing that risk, and making sure that they’re not falling foul of the need to diversify?

Kingsley Williams: Completely agree with your points there, and the importance of diversification. Very important to take well-rewarded equity risk over an appropriate time horizon. And as you’ve already mentioned, it must be well diversified.

And the reason why is that you want to minimise what we call idiosyncratic or company-specific risk and avoid losing all of your capital or having it written down significantly, which can easily happen with a particular company. 

It can face some scandal or some controversy, or some unknown risk that literally can result in that company no longer existing, and your investment becoming completely worthless.

So that’s why you want to diversify. It doesn’t diversify all your risk away, but it removes, close to zero, your idiosyncratic or company-specific risk if you’re well diversified.

However, diversification is not as straightforward a thing, because lots of companies in and of themselves may end up being less diversified in an extreme case. For example, you could hold lots of companies in a portfolio, but they might all operate in a single sector or geography or have a big concentration around that.

Whereas it’s possible to have a portfolio with a few companies in it that are themselves very well diversified. Think about different business lines, geographical exposures in which they operate, or different types of assets and business models that they generate revenue from. So that helps to diversify your mix. That’s why I say it’s not so straightforward to think about.

If you think about what you’re investing in when holding a broad basket of companies, you’re actually investing in the future revenue streams of all those companies, as well as any innovation they devise to overcome the challenges a particular business or industry is facing.

And let’s make no mistake, there is a lot of pressure to find those solutions, as remuneration incentives for employees, and particularly executives, are a big motivator. Or, not receiving those remuneration incentives is a big motivator. 

Or in a worst-case scenario, actually losing your very livelihood in your job because the business has to restructure or downsize. Jobs may be on the line if they haven’t delivered.

Coming to your point around market cap weighting, that’s a very interesting one. Ultimately, if we think about what a market cap-weighted index represents, it’s the sum total of what all investors in the market are holding in aggregate.

For every investor that’s overweight a particular company, there must be another investor or investors who are underweight that company, with the neutral position being the market cap-weighted index.

So when you think of a market cap-weighted index, it is the sum total of what all investors collectively hold. You could have extremely concentrated portfolios on the one end of that distribution, and then extremely diversified, or where you’ve solved for some other measure of concentration on the other end.

The market cap portfolio is the ultimate representation of what all investors hold in aggregate.

So talking about equal weighting, for example, as a way to diversify, is quite an extreme contrarian position to take. Because it says: regardless of where the collective wisdom of all investors is centred, which is the market cap-weighted index or portfolio, it ignores that and down-weights the largest companies to 1/N. 

If there are N companies in the universe (take an MSCI World Index, there’s 1,300 of them, give or take), you’re only going to hold 1/1,300th weight of each company in your portfolio. And similarly, you’re going to upweight all the smaller companies that might have a very minuscule weight, also 1/1,300th.

So you’re going to be big upweight on the small companies and massive downweight on the largest companies. It’s quite an aggressive way to tackle the diversification problem. And you could end up with a portfolio that has significant tilts from a geographical and a sector perspective that looks very different to the market cap-weighted portfolio, which as I mentioned earlier is the aggregate of what all investors are holding. That is ultimately the representation of what the universe looks like at the midpoint.

Equal weighting, for example, as a solution to that diversification problem, also has some pretty practical implications as well, such as liquidity. You’re now having to significantly upweight smaller companies, as well as trading costs, because now every time you rebalance that portfolio, you’re going to have to trade against market movements to bring everything back into a 1/N weight to keep that portfolio equally weighted.

To conclude on this point, if you’re trying to solve for risk, it’s better to be explicit about which risk you’re trying to solve for. For example, sector exposure or geographical exposure, or largest company weight or overall volatility. Those would be “measures of risk”.

And solve for those explicitly, because when you solve for that, there is always going to be some unintended consequence. Solve one problem, but you might introduce another into the portfolio. Diversification is an easy thing to talk about, not necessarily the most obvious thing to solve for. You might be solving that risk, but introducing many other unintended risks in the process.

The Finance Ghost: Fantastic. Lots of great stuff for people to think about there. All those smart choices etcetera.

But the one thing we haven’t talked about is: there is a way to do it in South Africa that gives you an additional benefit, which really then tilts it in favour of equities (in my opinion), and that is of course the tax-free savings account, which has become a more and more popular tool for South Africans.

I personally use it with a nice heavy tilt towards property ETFs because then I get a nice tax-free dividend, and I get the capital gain that comes from having these portfolios in South Africa, which works really well.

What do you do with yours, Kingsley? Because I don’t doubt that you are a tax-free savings man who maximises his amount every year. Where does it go? What sort of equities do you buy? Or do you just give it a nice spread?

Kingsley Williams: Great points there. There are only two certainties in life, right? Death and taxes. But in this case, you can avoid one of them.

So you definitely want to be taking advantage of any opportunities to reduce your overall tax effect on your savings. If we’re talking about investing, there are two big factors that erode your outcome from an investment return perspective. 

Tax is a huge one. So if you can ensure that your investments are not being subjected to tax by investing in tax-efficient vehicles like tax-free savings or tax-free investments, and similarly RAs as well, which also have tax benefits, retirement annuities, those are no-brainers to take advantage of.

The other big erosion of return is costs, and obviously, Satrix has very much been at the forefront of reducing that for investors.

When looking at what to invest in, particularly within a tax-free investment wrapper, let’s go back to the beginning. To quote The Sound of Music, that’s always a good place to start. 

What you want to be thinking about is: which index or asset class offers the best long-term return? First and foremost, that’s what you want to be solving for. And then do that in a tax-efficient way, because you’re going to be subjected to tax on all types of investments.

So while REITs, for example, like listed property, which you mentioned, would have a big tax advantage from a dividend or an income perspective because they are high-yielding type investments, you ultimately want to be solving for your total return. And equities also have tax implications on a dividend perspective and on a capital basis.

So, within a tax-free savings vehicle, you avoid the implications of capital gains and dividends withholding tax, which also cause a drag on your returns. So I think you want to go back to the beginning and say, I’m ultimately trying to solve for maximising my return over a particular term, hopefully 10 years plus. 

Therefore, how do I get the best investment over that horizon and invest in that? That’s the way I would think about tax-free investments, making sure I’m exposed to asset classes that are going to give me the best long-term return.

If you solve just for the tax implications on a yield basis, for example, you may end up solving for the wrong thing, because you’re now getting a big tax kick on bonds, for example, which is subject to income tax, which you would not be paying in a tax-free investment wrapper. But you’re ultimately still in a 3% less return over a long-term period than what equities would give you.

You’re solving for tax efficiency without solving for the long-term investment outcome.

The Finance Ghost: Thank you, Kingsley. Lots of great insights there. Always appreciate your time.

To those who want to engage with you, you’ll find Kingsley on LinkedIn; chat to him there. Go back and look at some of the other podcasts that I’ve done with Kingsley as well. There have been a number of them, and they are all very interesting.

Kingsley, thank you.

Kingsley Williams: Thank you very much, Ghost. Always great chatting with you.


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Ghost Bites (Bell Equipment | Crookes Brothers | Merafe | Spear REIT)

Bell Equipment’s earnings are dropping sharply (JSE: BEL)

This cannot be good news for the share price

Once upon a time, there was an offer of R53 per share on the table for Bell Equipment shareholders. During that period, I wasn’t shy to share my opinion that investors shouldn’t be too greedy, as it felt like the cycle was turning against Bell.

Today, it trades at R35.

I suspect that every single shareholder would take R53 and run for the hill at this point. Alas, there is no such offer on the table anymore.

The earnings are also headed firmly in the wrong direction, as evidenced by a trading statement that flags at least a 50% decline in HEPS for the six months to June 2026.

They blame a decrease in demand in certain markets, higher competition on the global stage (with an impact on pricing and thus margins), as well as the effect of tariffs in the US.

Ghost Bite: There’s a wonderful old saying in the markets: “Bulls make money. Bears make money. And the pigs? The pigs get slaughtered.” Greed is rarely rewarded by the markets. Trying to squeeze the last few bits out of that Bell offer a couple of years ago has backfired spectacularly for the shareholders who blocked the deal.

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Cyclicals aren't for everyone

Do you invest in cyclical stocks like Bell?


Mother Nature obliterated the macadamias business at Crookes Brothers (JSE: CKS)

Here’s a strong reminder of how tough agriculture actually is

Crookes Brothers released results for the year ended March 2026. As we already knew from trading statements, they are horrendous.

Revenue is only down by 7%, but they have swung from positive operating profit of R117 million to an operating loss of R210 million. This is before the fair value movement in biological assets, so we can’t even attribute this move to forecasts rather than reality.

Finance costs don’t go away just because the crops are having a tough time, so the movement looks even worse by the time we reach the bottom of the income statement. The loss for the year is R274 million vs. profit of R90 million in the prior year.

The headline numbers are far less severe, with a headline loss of R25.5 million vs. headline earnings of R65 million in the prior year.

When you see numbers like these, the main thing to check is the cash flow. Cash generated by operating activities was R60 million, significantly less than R101 million in the prior period. They were at least cash positive despite the earnings pressure.

Macadamias were the culprit this time around, with a 30% drop in revenue and a spectacular jump in operating losses from R35.6 million to R299 million. This was driven by a huge storm that uprooted 36% of the planted area. The situation in macadamias is so severe that Crookes Brothers has elected to cut their losses and exit this business.

For more context to this decision, they made operating profit of R147 million from sugar cane (up 2%) and R39 million from bananas (down 22%).

Unsurprisingly, there’s no dividend whatsoever for this financial year.

Ghost Bite: There’s nothing harder than primary agriculture. Nothing.


Relief for Merafe: the deal with Eskom is finalised (JSE: MRF)

Two smelters will be restarted

It’s been a long and difficult road for the ferrochrome industry (and any business that needs to operate a furnace). Energy costs have gone up tremendously, making these business models unsustainable without special tariffs from Eskom.

After much negotiation and no doubt lobbying of government as well, Merafe has gotten a tariff of 62c per kWh across the line with Eskom. It was approved by NERSA a few weeks ago and the detailed Ts & Cs have now been finalised with Eskom.

This allows Merafe to restart the Boshoek and Wonderkop smelters. The pricing framework lasts for three years, so Merafe at least has some visibility in its operations.

Ghost Bite: This is the right outcome for not just Merafe, but the broader value chain as well. This includes Afrimat (JSE: AFT), which was severely affected by the ferrochrome industry basically shutting down. Will Afrimat’s share price stop its decline after this news? I bought recently and I’m tempted to buy more, with Afrimat only slightly above its 52-week low.


Spear REIT’s financial year is off to a decent start (JSE: SEA)

They expect an acceleration over the rest of the year

Spear REIT has delivered an important operational update for the quarter ended May 2026. This represents the first quarter of the 2027 financial year.

Distributable income per share is up by 6.1%, so that represents real growth (i.e. growth in excess of inflation). Although they don’t declare a quarterly dividend, the company has indicated that a 95% payout ratio would still be in play here, so the distribution per share would be up by a similar percentage.

This puts them within their guidance of 6% – 8% growth, although not by much. Based on letting activity, they expect the growth rate to improve over the rest of the year vs. Q1. The guided range remains in place for FY27.

Spear’s performance in this quarter was driven by positive overall rental reversions, with the commercial portfolio (i.e. offices) as the unexpected winner in this regard. It really is all about location, location, location – and Spear is very good at finding those locations in the Western Cape. There’s been some pressure on vacancies, but Spear’s strategy is clearly working at the moment.

The loan-to-value (LTV) ratio is comically low at 8.3%, as Spear is waiting for several properties to transfer into the group after recent acquisitions. This LTV is certainly not representative of the balance sheet that Spear operates.

Ghost Bite: It helps that things seem to have improved in the Middle East, reducing some of those inflationary pressures on interest rates. Remember, REITs like low interest rates. If you want to understand why, you can check out this recent video from my YouTube channel:


Results of previous poll:


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • Two directors of Vodacom (JSE: VOD) sold shares worth R4.1 million. The sales were related to share awards, but the announcement doesn’t indicate the taxable vs. non-taxable portion. I therefore assume that this isn’t just for tax.
    • A non-executive director of Richemont (JSE: CFR) bought shares worth R1.1 million.
    • A director of KAP’s (JSE: KAP) subsidiary Safripol sold shares worth R607.5k. That’s not a good sign, as Safripol’s recent performance was boosted by the impact of the Middle East conflict on competing imports. If the simmering down of that conflict has put Safripol back where they were before, that’s a concern for KAP.
    • The CEO of Choppies (JSE: CHP) bought shares worth R126k.
  • Goldrush (JSE: GRSP) is under pressure from online gambling adoption in South Africa vs. the in-person options that underpin the company. Goldrush also has an online offering, but it’s not big enough to offset the brick-and-mortar operations. This is contributing to group HEPS falling by between 50.7% and 68.3% for the year ended March 2026. Detailed results should be out early this week.
  • Brikor (JSE: BIK) is moving ahead with the scheme of arrangement to repurchase all the shares held in the company by investors other than Nikkel Trading. This is priced at 17 cents per share. To give you an idea of how small this company is, the total repurchase will be just R19.7 million! It doesn’t make any sense for them to be listed at this size.
  • Clientèle (JSE: CLI) will be leaving our market this week. With the offer to shareholders having met all the required conditions (including maximum acceptances), the delisting of the company will be implemented on 30 June. Farewell to one of the most dependable dividend stocks on the JSE!
  • Here’s a fun fact about the market: the JSE (JSE: JSE) is now repurchasing shares in itself via the JSE. Remember, the JSE is listed on its own market i.e. it uses its own product! They’ve repurchased 1.28% of shares in issue since the authority was granted by shareholders at the AGM in May.
  • Wesizwe Platinum (JSE: WEZ) is planning a phased restart of operations at Bakubung Platinum Mine this week. This comes after a temporary shutdown to facilitate a Section 189 consultation process. The restart is subject to the conclusion of a memorandum of agreements with the trade unions.
  • Labat Africa (JSE: LAB) has renewed the cautionary announcement related to the potential acquisition of the remaining 24.45% in Classic International Trading. The deal is still alive, with negotiations at an advanced stage. These things take time.
  • There is literally no trade in the shares of Castleview Property Fund (JSE: CVW), with this company essentially acting as an investment holding company for a small group of property investors. They’ve mainly been building up stakes in other listed REITs, while selling off directly held properties. The net asset value per share increased by 9% in the year ended March 2026. The distribution per share jumped by 74%, but that’s obviously not an indication of maintainable growth.
  • Marshall Monteagle (JSE: MMP) is also in the limited trade bucket, although the stock does at least change hands from time to time. This investment company has a broad portfolio of South African property, international stocks and various financing and trading companies. For the year ended March 2026, HEPS increased by more than 10x! Most of this is thanks to the disposal of investments and the associated gains.
  • Telemasters (JSE: TLM) has such little liquidity in its stock that it “trades by appointment” (as the saying goes). A trading statement tells us that HEPS managed to increase by more than 700% for the year ended June 2026! This is accompanied by a dividend of 0.3 cents per share for the quarter ending June 2026.
  • With Brandon Craig taking the top job at BHP (JSE: BHG) on 1 July 2026, there are other organisational changes coming. For example, the President Americas role is being split into President North America and President South America. It’s not uncommon to see changes to leadership structures when a new CEO comes in.
  • PPC (JSE: PPC) has announced the replacement for Brenda Berlin, who is retiring as CFO with effect from 30 June 2026. Veliswa Rozani will take her place, bringing extensive experience from the motor retail industry among others. She will join PPC on 1 October 2026, with PPC chief strategy officer Paulo Marques appointed as acting CFO for three months to plug the gap.
  • Araxi (JSE: AXX) announced that The Capital Appreciation Empowerment Trust has sold 40 million shares to settle its debt, leaving it with an unencumbered holding of 35 million shares. This is technically the sign of a successful B-BBEE deal, although it does of course reduce the shareholding when shares are sold to settle debt. The trust’s beneficial interest in Araxi has declined to 2.71%. Because of accounting rules and Araxi consolidating the trust, it actually gets treated as a disposal of treasury shares.
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