Saturday, March 7, 2026
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Ghost Stories #95: Reeling in returns: Sea Harvest’s best-ever performance

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The ocean is a mystical place that has captured our imagination as a species for as long as anyone can remember. And although there are many fish in the sea, unlocking that resource in a sustainable and profitable way really isn’t that simple.

Sea Harvest has signed off on an incredible year that demonstrates the depth of the strategy – quite literally. The way they think about the various seafood products is fascinating, as explained by CEO Felix Ratheb on this podcast.

With operating margin more than doubling in 2025 and headline earnings coming in 4.2x higher than the prior year, this income statement has plenty of operating leverage. This adds to the intrigue around the business model and how the group is managed, with those insights delivered by CFO Muhammad Brey in this discussion.

Get ready to learn from Felix and Muhammad on this excellent podcast. The passion for the ocean comes through just as clearly as the numbers.

This podcast deals with topics like:

  • The importance of hake to Sea Harvest’s business
  • Diversification beyond hake – and beyond South Africa’s waters as well
  • Why the Ladismith Cheese disposal makes strategic sense
  • Key features of the business model that lead to such high operating leverage
  • The approach taken to managing financial risks like fuel costs and forex movements
  • Sustainable fishing and how Sea Harvest interacts with the precious resources in our oceans
  • The financial outlook for the group, recognising the cyclicality in the model

Sea Harvest believes strongly in the value of Ghost Mail in the South African investment ecosystem. They have sponsored this podcast for readers, but I was allowed to ask whatever I wanted to ask. Please do your own research and do not treat this podcast as an endorsement of Sea Harvest as an investment.

Full transcript:

The Finance Ghost: Welcome to this episode of the Ghost Stories podcast. Thank you for being with me in a very busy earnings week. It’s really the start of earnings season, actually, on the JSE here in March 2026.

That gives me a fantastic opportunity to speak to local companies, to their management teams, to understand more about their strategies. Companies that have realised the value of the Ghost Mail audience and are keen to support the platform. 

Sea Harvest is one such company, and it’s so good to be able to do this podcast. Full house here, I really get to speak to top management – Felix Ratheb, who is the CEO of the group, and Muhammad Brey, who is the CFO.

Very grateful for your time today, gentlemen. I’m very aware that earnings release day is hectic, to say the least, so thank you for being here. Felix, Muhammad, welcome to the show.

Felix Ratheb: Thank you. Great to be on your show, Ghost.

The Finance Ghost: Congratulations! Let me just start there. Really good numbers. Your share price is up 54% in the past 12 months. That must be a nice thing to see when you go on Google Finance or wherever it is that you check.

You’ve just released results for the year ended December 2025. Operating margin almost doubled, up from 8% to 15% – delightful. 

Headline earnings, up 320%. People don’t understand when numbers get to that level, like, “What is this thing?” We understand 10% or 20%, but you see 320% and your brain switches off because you don’t know what that means. 

It means it is 4.2x higher than it was the previous year. That’s a serious number. So, both of you, congratulations. I really look forward to digging into these numbers. 

Felix, I’m going to start with you because, of course, Sea Harvest, like all companies, is really just a roll-up of a whole lot of things. You’ve got a whole lot of different businesses, and I think it’s important for listeners who may not necessarily be familiar with what you do to actually understand what is inside this thing that has added up to this fantastic performance. 

So I think the first place to start is if you could just give us – I’d call it the lay of the land, but in your case, it’s the lay of the sea – major segments, where you operate, and what people will find inside Sea Harvest?

Felix Ratheb: Thanks. I think the best way to start is to go back to the very beginning, and that was in 1964 when we were founded on the West Coast in Saldanha Bay.

At the time, the largest hake fishing company (because hake is very abundant in our cold Benguela Current) was I&J, and a company called Sea Harvest was founded in 1964. That’s over 60 years ago, and we’ve seen the growth of the company since then. 

Of course, during that period, we did have sanctions. The company had grown by acquiring the third biggest business within hake called Atlantic Trawling. 

When I took over in 2013, it was about the same size as I&J. So, you had two big private hake businesses that were global businesses, and that were really fantastic global businesses.

Our journey started really from there, in terms of investing in our business. Each fishing trawler is a freezer trawler, where you’ve got a factory on board, that would cost you in the region of R250 million just for one. So you can imagine, building a fleet is very capital-intensive. 

We invested in our assets and built a very solid, globally competitive fishing company. We compete around the world. We don’t necessarily compete globally against the likes of I&J and Oceana; we actually compete against other nations. 

We would compete against the New Zealanders (who produce hoki), against the Americans (who produce pollock), and mainly the Norwegians and Icelanders (who have cod), so that was the start of the journey. 

We acquired the third-biggest company in our space, called Viking Fishing. That catapulted Sea Harvest far; being 50% bigger than the next hake fishing company in South Africa, and the largest hake fishing company in the Southern Hemisphere.

From that perspective, that’s the core of our business. That’s why I’ve spent a bit of time just explaining that. 

We employ around 3,200 people within the Sea Harvest business. We have more than 40 vessels operating around the coastline all the way from Namibia to Port Elizabeth. We’ve got four factories that we operate – we have a facility in Saldanha Bay, in Cape Town, and we have a facility in Mossel Bay with fishing operations. 

Our operations are vertically integrated – we catch, we process and we sell the fish globally under our brand and internationally under the species Cape Hake. That’s the core of our business and where the bulk of our capex sits, our investment and our people.

Adjacent to that, we’ve tried to diversify out of being only in hake. We acquired a business that was founded in 1905. It’s 120 years old this year, which is the Saldanha business in St. Helena Bay. 

Saldanha really produces three types of products. One is your canned pilchards. Everybody would know Lucky Star – well, the number two brand in that category is Saldanha.

That’s a canned product, lower LSMs (Living Standards Measure) – hake sits with the upper LSMs, so that’s a cheaper protein. That’s 50% of that business. 

And 50% of the business is catching another species called anchovy (herring or red-eye), which we call ‘industrial fish’. That predominantly goes into the production of fish meal and fish oil. 

Now one will ask, “What is fish meal and fish oil?” It’s basically used as a core ingredient when producing feed for the aquaculture industry. You’ll appreciate that wild-caught resources are pretty much capped at, let’s call it, 7 million tonnes. Most of the growth has come from aquaculture. 

An example would be salmon. Salmon has probably been the most successful farmed fish product that you will find. 

Most of the products that one would feed the salmon would be our own protein, which would be our anchovy and our fish oil, which is very high in omega-3, etcetera. So, that’s the second part of our business and a sizable part of our business based in St. Helena Bay. 

The third part of our business – and I’m going to stay with fishing – is in Australia. 

We managed to consolidate that sector over a period of time. We’ve put three businesses in one, and it’s a vertically integrated prawn/bycatch-of-prawn business (crabs and scallops, etcetera). That’s our business in Australia. 

We operate out of Exmouth and Shark Bay (it’s about 2,000 km northwest of Perth), and our head office is in Perth. So, that’s our third fishing operation, which is in Australia.

We have embarked on growth within aquaculture. And the reason is that, with wild resources, supply’s constrained. It’s constrained with quotas; it’s constrained with sustainability issues, so aquaculture is the growing segment.

We looked at South Africa and what we could invest in. To be frank, we had bought oyster businesses, we had bought muscle businesses, we had farmed salmon trout, and we divested from all those businesses. 

Our view was that the only category here in South Africa that could compete globally was abalone. Now, abalone is predominantly appreciated by the Chinese consumer and Chinese communities, no matter where they are in the world. 

It was a very, very lucrative industry with very high operating margins. Quite frankly, when we entered this industry, we just could not produce enough for China. I mean, it’s a billion people who absolutely love abalone.

It’s going through its own issues right now, and we can talk about that later, but we own four farms in South Africa. We’re going to have two now. 

We’re probably 40% of the production out of South Africa. All the product will go to Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and China because that’s where they appreciate it. And it’s an area of the business that can still grow.

The final segment in our business (which we are now divesting from) is Cape Harvest Foods. That was the dairy part of our business.

When we were going through the fishing rights allocation process in 2019/2020, it was a very uncertain period for the business – and for our country, I believe, over that period. 

Our view was that we needed to diversify away from fishing from the perspective of, “What happens if we don’t come out unscathed from the fishing rights allocation process?” So we invested in dairy. 

Why dairy? I think I was asked once by Bruce Whitfield, “What do dairy and fish have in common?” And the only thing I could think of is that they both pair very well with wine. 

Other than that, it actually exhibits quite a few fundamentals that are similar, one being the fact that it’s also constrained by supply. You don’t see growth in milk supply of double digits. If it grows 1% to 3%, it’s a lot, and this is a global phenomenon.

At the same time, people want to eat healthier. When I was brought up, you had to eat margarine – “it’s safe”. Now, nobody eats margarine. We know that it’s not healthy. So everybody’s moved to natural butter. 

Cheese is one of the fastest-growing categories globally, and also the powders that you make (for the chocolate industry, the soup industry, the baking industry, etcetera). That appealed to us because it had very similar fundamentals. 

We invested in that business, and I think we did incredibly well out of that business. We put in a new powder factory – two powder factories! – a butter factory and a cheese factory, but to cut a long story short, we got to a point where we were either going to back the strategy and put a lot more capital towards it or divest. 

And basically, because we were only in cheese, butter and powders, we don’t do the value-added dairy – in other words, your UHT milk, your yoghurts and those types of products; your energy drinks.

So, our view was we were going to give it a full go, or we’d rather divest and allocate that capital in our core fishing business and stick to fishing. 

From a board, business and management perspective, our view was that we know fishing very well. Our debt had got pretty high over the period with all our acquisitions over the last nine years, and our view was that it’s better deployed to pay back and halve our debt. 

We’ve subsequently entered into a sale agreement with Woodlands Dairy, a fantastic company in the Eastern Cape. They will be acquiring the business and taking it forward. 

So those are the various pillars of our business. They’re very different, you’re right. Where we are going is to try to have a diversified seafood offering with hake being the anchor tenant, but also with pelagics offering something very different. 

Sea Harvest is an iconic brand. We’re the number-one frozen fish brand in South Africa. In the last three years, we’ve been the market leader. 

From a brand equity perspective, we rank number one right now in terms of frozen fish. But at the same time, we are competitors to Lucky Star when you look at the lower LSM. So, we’ve got fantastic brands and a great portfolio of assets. 

It’s a very capital-intensive industry with very high barriers to entry. Quota is only given to you every 15 years. To replace a fleet, you probably need R3 billion or R4 billion. Factories that were built many, many years ago – replacement value R2 billion to R3 billion. 

So, you’re talking about a very capital-intensive industry. But from our perspective, those assets have been fully paid. It’s very cash generative – all fishing companies, not only us, are very cash generative.

Nice free cash flow conversion to EBITDA, probably north of 60%, which allows the business (although slightly cyclical from a catch rate perspective, and we can discuss that later) to be able to be more consistent in terms of a dividend flow and to provide a decent dividend yield to investors. 

That is the business in a nutshell.

The Finance Ghost: Very nice. Thank you so much, Felix. A couple of things from that.

Number one, I can tell you that butter is my ride or die. I agree with you about margarine. If doctors ever tell me I can’t have butter, then that’s it. I’m going to become a ghost in more ways than just a purple cartoon. I can’t imagine life without butter. 

Life without fish would also be a bit bleak. I am a fan, I must say. What I didn’t quite realise, perhaps, is that hake is such a South African staple. We think fish and chips, we go hake. 

But it sounds like if you go overseas (now that I think about it, on overseas travels I haven’t really ordered a fish and chips), you don’t get hake, do you? On average, you probably get something else.

Felix Ratheb: It’s a good question. Let me unpack that a little bit. Southern Europe is very different. Southern Europe, particularly Spain and Portugal, would catch hake in their waters. It’s very abundant. 

They grew up eating hake, and when it dried up in Spain in particular, the Spanish fleet went looking for hake in other parts of the world. Namibia, South Africa and Argentina are the other three where it’s very similar to their hake in abundance. 

They were very used to hake, and that’s why that is the predominant market. Even today, where we sell the bulk of the hake, it’s still Spain, Portugal and Italy, your Southern Mediterranean countries. 

But if you go up north, your point is very well made in terms of fish and chips. 

The fish and chips culture really comes from the UK, and everywhere there is an English community (whether it be in Australia, the US or Canada), you have a very strong fish and chips culture. 

That is predominantly cod. That was mainly caught in Norway, Iceland, and even the UK, and that is very prevalent in Northern Europe. So, you have Northern Europe – they love their cod. Southern Europe – they love their hake.

What we are seeing lately, however, is that you don’t get much cod, and their go-to species has become hake, from that perspective. So, you are finding that most of our growth in the last 10 years has actually come from the north of Europe. 

We’re seeing great strides in Holland – your lekkerbekje that everybody knows if they go and they’ve lived in Holland for a while, that is hake today. You go to Germany, they’ve moved to hake from cod; Poland has been a very good growth market for us, particularly in the last two to three years; Sweden. 

So, hake is sold all over Europe (and the United States and Australia). We simply don’t have enough product for everyone. 

Number one, it’s wild. Number two, it’s healthy. It’s full of omega-3s. It’s quite bland in terms of not being very fishy, so consumers love it. 

It’s the go-to fish in South Africa for moms for their kids – we’ve all been brought up eating fish fingers in South Africa; that’s probably the first interaction you have with fish. So, it is a staple in my view in South Africa, but very important in terms of a very healthy protein globally. 

And Europeans, to give you an example, the Spanish eat 60kg per capita of fish per year. That’s almost four-and-a-half times a week compared to, let’s say, 8kg in South Africa.

Our view is that South Africa has got a lot of growth still. As people move up the LSMs, they want to eat more seafood. People want to live healthier. Obesity is an issue, and demand for fish just keeps growing. 

It’s got a low carbon footprint, which is another positive in terms of fish, and we can unpack that later. But yes, it is a go-to protein for a healthy lifestyle.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah. I mean, South Africa, we think that chicken is a vegetable at the braai. It is a different market here compared to Southern Europe, for sure. And the fish fingers and tomato sauce, absolutely. As someone who has young kids, these are just the realities of life. 

Lots of interesting stuff here. Lots of supply and demand dynamics, which I really do enjoy. I’m looking forward to getting into some of the numbers with Muhammad just now – who is still on this podcast, I promise! We’re just thoroughly enjoying learning about fish at the moment. 

Felix, I do have one more for you, before we move across to talk through some more of the details on the income statement and that kind of thing with Muhammad. That is around the latest performance, bluntly, which is just so good.

It’s been described in your own results announcement as “the strongest performance in your history”. That’s a lovely thing to be able to write. I’m curious to run through, very high-level, without going into much detail (people will go read the results), just what is really driving that. 

And then one specific question from my side. I keep reading about beef inflation. Obviously, with everything going on in South Africa, I would imagine that’s good news for fish, right? Which is a protein source. 

Presumably, if the steak is so much more expensive than it used to be, then suddenly I can put a fish on the braai and it just got a whole lot more affordable, right?

Felix Ratheb: I believe so. I think that if you look at meat inflation, with foot-and-mouth, it’s going to get even worse. That’s tailwinds for us in the seafood industry, but I’m a fish snob. I keep saying that if you look at what we go through to bring that beautiful piece of fish to one’s plate… we’ve got these big ships, lots of people working on them. They go out to sea for 55 days. We produce on the ship, bringing back the last hunted protein on the planet. I mean, there’s nothing that you eat that you hunt, other than fish. It’s naturally organic.

So, seafood inflation has been high, more in the overseas market than locally. But I believe whitefish will start catching up, particularly if you look at inflation with salmon. Salmon is unbelievable, with what it’s done in terms of inflation. 

I think it’s a positive, both locally and internationally. It’s the last hunted protein that everybody will want. And we haven’t even started selling this type of product to China. 

When the Chinese consumer turns to a more Western diet, this is the healthiest way of eating. That has opportunity, too. As I say, the issue on our side is more the supply side. 

Regarding the performance, yes, there are many variables. When you start with a fishing business, and you look at its good performance, you first have to start with the health of the resource. We call it ‘biomass’ in our terminology. How healthy are fish stocks? That’s the first one.

Our biomass in hake (and on the pelagics side, but let’s rather stick to hake) has been very, very healthy. It’s been certified by the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) – that’s the gold standard for sustainability globally, not only in South Africa, and is well managed by government. 

That’s something that is very, very important for us. It’s managed based on science. The crowd at UCT actually do a lot of the modelling, and it’s a model that’s been around for a very long time. 

So, if the biomass is healthy and you’re not taking too much fish out of the water, it’ll be there to sustain future generations.

What we’ve seen this year is a very healthy biomass. Our catch rates (that’s the amount of fish that we catch per day that we go fishing) are up 40%. That’s a very big metric in our lives. 

You can imagine that if I go fishing and I’m catching 10 tonnes of fish a day, I’ve paid for the fuel, I’ve paid for the people, I’ve paid for everything. If I’m catching 14 tonnes a day, effectively my costs are 40% lower, so that has been very positive. We’ve seen fantastic catch rates in the business.

So, you’ve got volume and you’ve got efficiency in terms of catch. Then you look at the top line, and you’ve got more volume now, but secondly, you’ve also got (which I find has happened in the last five years) inflation in hake being high. 

When I started in this business, if we could get CPI (Consumer Price Index) plus 3% or 4% in the markets in which we operate (because obviously we sell to Europe, which had a different CPI to South Africa), it was a good result. 

Now, we are seeing CPI plus 7% or 8% in the last three years. Very good inflation, so selling prices have been significantly higher, and that has helped our result.

You then need some tailwinds, and we’ve had them. Last year, we had a favourable exchange rate. The rand was relatively weak. 

We’re probably one of the few industries that want a weak exchange rate because it benefits us – 64% of what we catch, we export. It’s a big number, and we’ve had a relatively weak rand, mainly to the euro (because we sell to Europe), so that was positive.

At the same time, fuel was favourable – we hit a high of $80 to $90 a barrel, and it’s come back nicely down to around $60 a barrel last year (forget what happened last weekend, I’m just looking at a full period) – and we came off three difficult years. 

You’ll appreciate that when you come off three difficult years, you focus on costs. We got a leaner business. All the right variables, going in our favour. 

We had invested in capacity. We bought four ships, two last year, so that when the good times come, we have the capacity and we have the throughput in our factories to take advantage of it. 

Call it sometimes being lucky – all the stars aligned and we were ready. The management team was, let’s say, in place to be able to win the game against the All Blacks on the weekend. That’s what I put it down to. It’s really having some tailwinds and being able to take advantage of the opportunity. 

And you’re right. I’ve been here for 23 years, and this is by far the best year. The last time I saw this was in 2002/2003, when we had these types of margins. 

At the same time, it’s not only hake. I focused on hake because out of the R1.3 billion that we made in operating profit, R1 billion came from hake. So I focused most of my time on that. 

But the pelagics also had a decent year. Even though the prices came off (because they were off a high in the last two years), we made over R200 million in EBIT in that business, so that had a good year.

Australia had a record year. We had better volumes of prawns and better pricing on the prawns.

Our dairy business also had a record year, which was also positive because you never want to be selling a business coming off a poor year. So it was really, really positive.

Really, the only part of our business that struggled was abalone. Now, abalone is reliant on China. What we are seeing is that the Chinese consumer, specifically in terms of discretionary spend, is not spending. They are saving.

They see that the tough times are coming, and we’re seeing that more than 30% of what they earn, they save. That has built up. It’s even higher than post-Covid. We have a situation right now where we need them to spend.

The product that we offer is a white tablecloth offering. It’s the type of product you’d eat at a high-class restaurant like a Shangri-La or the Hyatt. It’s the Wagyu of seafood, and it’s one of the five treasures that the Chinese appreciate – they absolutely love abalone.

But you need the right consumer confidence and the right macro environment for consumers to spend, so that’s been quite tough. We made a loss in that business. Quite a significant loss – close to R60 million operating loss. 

Fortunately, it’s a very small part of our business. It only makes up 4% of our revenue, so the only blip that we had was in our abalone business. Otherwise, every other business fired at the right time.

The Finance Ghost: Felix, thanks. Lots of great additional details there. I quite enjoy the ‘raising of a child’ and how that’s coming through in this, right? It’s fish fingers, it’s tomato sauce. Then one day, you get your heart broken and your mom gives you the ‘many fish in the sea’ talk. We all had that! 

And that’s the biomass, right? There have literally been many fish in the sea, and that’s been a huge boost to your numbers in this period, which is obviously very helpful.

Muhammad, I’m excited to bring you in here because we’re going to talk about operating leverage. Felix gave a little example there – 10 tonnes, 14 tonnes. I’m not sure if that was the example per ship or just good maths – or easy maths, rather – but it is interesting. 

I’ve always wondered about this – the ship goes out, operating leverage is the name of the game in your business. That’s why we are seeing this incredible result when times are good. As a CFO, can you just walk us through the shape of the income statement? 

And let me also say I’m slightly jealous that you get to be in a business that has so much operating leverage. That must be, I would think, quite a fun thing actually. Maybe a bit stressful too, but it’s interesting. It’s definitely interesting.

Muhammad Brey: Thanks, Ghost. Indeed, it is. It’s interesting, and it’s exciting when it’s going the right way. When the tide goes out, it can also be the other way, so it’s a tale of two sides of the coin. 

There are plenty of fixed costs in the business. Let’s just start with the asset base, which Felix touched on earlier. Ultimately, we are a manufacturing concern of note. There’s a total of somewhere in the order of R10 billion of total assets in the group. We have 56 vessels, 12 factories and 7 aquaculture operations. 

And of course, what’s complementing that is our intangible rights. The 15-year rights in South Africa and the intangible rights in Australia. 

Ironically, these are also the moats around our business; the barriers to entry. Those, as well as our 5,200 employees and the 30 markets in which we sell. 

But typically, like any manufacturing concern, these are big beasts, and you need to feed them with volume, and volume drives these efficiencies. So, we try to sweat these assets through maximum capacity utilisation.

If I then look at the profit and loss (P&L) – how we look at it and the shape of the P&L, the first thing, of course, that drives it is the top line.

Felix tries to drive inflation plus 4% to 5%. The markets allow this with demand, of course, outstripping supply. We then also generally benefit from the weakening rand. It generally weakens on a year-to-year basis.

Of course now, with the sale of Ladismith, that exposure improves from 52% to 64% of revenue. So that’s a nice flip, firstly, for us and something that we try to secure by insurance on an annual basis.

If you then look at the cost of sales line, a large portion of our cost of sales is fixed. Just to give you a sense, a small vessel going out will cost in the order of R200,000 per day to run. A medium-sized vessel, R300,000. The large freezers, which go out for between 45 and 55 days, cost in the order of R450,000 per day to run. 

Now, whether you’re out catching one tonne a day or 10 tonnes a day, a large portion of those costs are fixed. So, you can imagine what volume does to it. 

Just to digress, the biggest portion of those costs would be staff (in the order of 30% to 35%) and fuel (in the order of 15% to 20%). So, you can see how very much fixed these costs are. 

Ultimately, you want to feed these beasts. So when you look at a year like 2025, where the stars sort of aligned, number one, we had much better catch rates, which drove efficiencies. But secondly, we also had catch volumes up in the order of 17%. 

So now, suddenly, you have 17% more volume to spread over the same cost base. You can imagine what that does to your cost per kg. If you put that into numbers, revenue was up 20%. Cost of sales was only up 2%, even though we had revenue up 20%.

Gross profit up 60%, and ultimately operating profit up 200% to almost R1 billion. That just shows you the operating leverage in the business.

We have a very similar situation for our pelagics business, and also even in our Ladismith Cheese business, where we saw that we grew in milk by 8%, but that ultimately translated into a 36% increase in operating profit.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, very nice. I’m going to look at those ships slightly differently now. My little boy, in particular, thinks they are the coolest thing in the world when he sees them in the ocean. 

Now I can tell him how much they cost. A number that will mean absolutely nothing to him at the age of five, but he’ll still think they’re pretty cool. And I think they’re pretty cool. 

It’s just one of those industries where it’s very real. You can see and touch it, and it brings your food. It’s the real economy, it really is.

And you’ve got a lot of stuff you need to think about in running those boats. You’ve mentioned fuel, for example. Felix, earlier you talked about how the rand influences your selling prices out to Europe, but it obviously also influences fuel costs here.

So, we’ve seen what’s happened in Iran in the last few days. Who knows what happens from here? What happens with the oil price? Is it all just going to blow over? 

There is no way of knowing. And this is why it’s a risk, right? This is financial risk. That’s how it works. 

I guess, the oil price, other than that big $100 blip in 2022 (and I only know this offhand because I looked at an oil price chart this weekend), has been stuck in a bit of a window, right? 

You’ve got a great situation where the cartels kind of want to keep it in a place where they can make their money. And that’s great news, actually, for you guys, because it doesn’t actually flap around that much anymore, other than when there’s some kind of big global distortion. 

And this is a question for you again, Muhammad – as the person who has to run the numbers in this thing, how do you look at, “Okay, which risks can we hedge?” 

And then obviously, you’ve got risks where you just have to accept them as part of business. That’s why it’s called equity risk. There are certain things that are just a risk you have to carry.

How do you guys manage that?

Muhammad Brey: From a risk mitigation perspective or an insurance perspective, our strategy is to hedge 50% of our rand or euro exposure. A big portion of our sales goes into Europe, so what we’ll do on an annual basis is we will hedge 50% of our book for the following year, and this buys us insurance. 

So we’ve locked in the rate. Not only do we lock in the current rate, but we also lock in the forward points or the interest rate differential in that. So we get another R1.20-odd on top of the rate that we have today. 

For example, if the rand is trading at, let’s call it, R18 to the euro today, if I take out a hedge one year forward, I’ll get about another R1.20 on that. That allows me then to lock in R19.20 going forward. 

So our strategy is to lock in at least one year forward, and we buy insurance on 50% of our book. The rest of it is then exposed to the spot market. 

Last year, we traded at around R20. It’s going down now to R19. So, the balance of the book is then exposed, but we ride the ups and the downs.

On the fuel side, you’re right – it has traded in a very narrow window in the last year or so. We’ve tended to sort of lock in when it’s a bit lower. At around the $60 level, we tend to lock in.

Of course, if it goes higher than that, we’d rather ride it out because it would typically tip back to the $60, so we don’t really have a firm strategy on fuel. It would be more opportunistic, and when it’s low, we will take out the exposure. 

The third thing, of course, with the leverage balance sheet is that in the past, you would ask yourself, “Do we hedge the interest rates?” The interest rate was coming down, so it didn’t make sense to hedge at that time. 

At the moment, we’re still looking at one or two more cuts in interest rates coming through, so it wouldn’t make sense to hedge. 

Not only that, but we’re also looking to repay a portion of our debt through the sale of Ladismith cheese, so it doesn’t make sense to lock in anything on that side. 

Again, on the interest rate side, we are much more opportunistic. We’ll see how the curve ultimately bottoms out towards the end of the year, and we’ll look at the bank balance sheet to see what the strategy would be over the next couple of years.

The Finance Ghost: Very interesting, thank you. That’s a lot of additional insight into how you manage the business, which I do appreciate.

I’m going to take it back to Felix now. So, Felix, I was going to ask you about the Ladismith cheese disposal, but to be honest, I think you gave such a great intro to the group earlier that you’ve kind of answered the question – around why you are stepping away from that and how, other than the pairing with wine, it’s not necessarily a good fit with the seafood business. 

So I’m going to ask you something that’s a slight variance of that, which is to say, as you look at the portfolio that you have today, do you feel like you’re a long-term holder of everything that’s in there now? 

Obviously, I’ve done this for long enough to know that everything is for sale at the right price, really (except probably your hake operations). But, as you sit, do you feel like where the group is right now as a portfolio, you’re comfortable? 

Or do you think that there might still be a little bit more M&A activity to come in the near term?

Felix Ratheb: I think where we are right now and the way we’ve articulated it to our investors was that we had such a phenomenal growth period since listing that it’s time to consolidate and take stock.

So that’s what we are doing. Let’s shore up the balance sheet, let’s just get to a consistent dividend policy and yield. I think that is very, very important before we look at doing more.

However, the reality is that no business is going to grow by sitting still. If I look at the portfolio, I think we’re too big in hake now, and even if we did want to buy other hake businesses, it would be tough from a CompCom perspective.

I think there’s still opportunity in pelagics. I don’t believe we’re the biggest player, and there are other related fisheries in South Africa that we’re not exposed to. I would prefer South Africa for seafood because it’s closer to manage. 

So, we would stick to fishing, and you never know what opportunities will come along. To give you an example, we spoke about the Viking acquisition. I was working on that transaction for five years. 

Ladismith cheese – we didn’t just enter the cheese business. We spent five to six years talking to the owners. In fact, when we had made the offer, the factory burnt down, and we came back two years later to buy the business. 

Take a very long time in terms of understanding the sector, the business and, more importantly, the state of the assets and management. 

So we will always be on the lookout, however, we are entering a consolidation-play phase, and for the next two to three years, we’re looking at really optimising our balance sheet. 

In terms of what assets we could or could not keep. It’s really the assets that I’ve classed as having potential, but will they actually survive? 

Let’s look at abalone. We’ve spent R1 billion in abalone. Our view is that our investment thesis is correct. Once consumers start spending again in Hong Kong and in China, I believe we’re going to get to the prices where we were, and then it will be a great business. 

But what if it doesn’t happen? So, you’ve got to be running those scenarios, too, when you look at it strategically. 

So, we’ve got a plan. If it goes the way we want, we would want to grow in that part of the business. But if it goes the other way as well, what’s our exit strategy? I would put it in the question mark corner.

The second one is Australia. We entered Australia, wanted to consolidate that sector and grow. It’s still not big enough, in terms of where we believe it should be. $100 million business, which is the size of the business as it is right now, it probably needs to be $250 million. 

The problem in Australia is that you don’t have a Sea Harvest or an I&J or an Oceana or anybody bigger that you can go and buy. It’s all these small family businesses. So, for you to build a vertically integrated seafood business, you’ve got to buy all these businesses. 

You can appreciate the amount of time and effort it takes to integrate those businesses, which we’ve had to do.

The question mark now is, are we going to deploy more capital to grow Australia?

If not, we’ve got to relook at that asset in terms of – do we want to be there? Because it takes a lot of management time sometimes. Everybody looks at all the ratios in terms of return on capital employed (ROCE) or return on investment (ROI), etcetera, etcetera. 

From a management point of view, I look at it from a return on effort perspective. Sometimes there’s a lot of effort, especially when it’s that far away. 

If it’s not going to become sizable and we’re not going to give it more support, then we’ve got to look at that portfolio, because again, it can be deployed better elsewhere. 

That’s where I am, in my mind. I’ve got assets where they’re question-marked “should I be there?”, but they’ve got the potential if certain things change. 

I’ve also got other sectors within the South African seafood industry that I think we don’t play in. If they were to be available, I’d need to strengthen my balance sheet first to look at whether we would look at something. 

So as you’ve said, if there’s good value, whether you’re selling or buying, you’d always look at it.

The Finance Ghost: Ya. This is a note of appreciation from my side, Felix. I think that’s a great answer, and thank you for addressing abalone. I wanted to ask about it specifically, but I thought that might be slightly unfair, so I’m glad you commented on it. 

Interesting about Australia. Look, anywhere that has a place called Shark Bay – I think everything in Australia is dangerous, so when a place is named after a dangerous animal, then it must be pretty serious. I can well believe it. 

And you could definitely teach the retail sector a thing or two about selling a business on a high like Ladismith Cheese. We’ve seen some pretty hideous exits of businesses by JSE-listed companies in recent times, so yeah, well done. I think that sounds pretty solid. 

Muhammad, back to you then. It sounds like you might be getting some money in the bank from these disposals. That’s exciting, as the CFO. Jokes aside, capital allocation – how should investors be thinking about this in your context? How are you guys looking at this?

Muhammad Brey: Firstly, I think what the sale does is show off the balance sheet. If we just look at this in absolute numbers, debt goes down to circa R1.3 billion, of which 50% is in Australia, which has a very long-term repayment profile, and the balance of 50% in South Africa. 

But the core leverage ratios go down from 1.3x to 0.9x. It’s sub-1x EBITDA. And if you just think about that in the light of where we were at the end of 2024, 2.5x, that does give you quite a bit of pressure and stress. 

The balance sheet will then obviously be in a much better position. That allows a lot more flexibility as a management team. However, I think the strategy in the immediate future is to continue to consolidate. 

Of course, the first thing is to prioritise maintaining our asset base, be it the vessels or the factories; make sure that they’re running efficiently. 

Then secondly, we try to squeeze out whatever else we can in terms of organic growth opportunities and efficiency projects. The way we look at that is typically, we want to earn a very decent margin above the weighted average cost of capital. So that’s the second avenue that we will pursue. 

Thirdly, I think we’d want to still reduce debt further. We do want to keep a level of debt on the balance sheet. In my mind, that’s circa 1x EBIT. From an efficiency perspective, it doesn’t have to be completely ungeared. 

And then ultimately, if we don’t have any further use for cash, that would be returned to shareholders – be it dividends, interim dividends, share buybacks. Ultimately, rewarding shareholders for their patience and ultimately driving value.

The Finance Ghost: Yep, I like it. That sounds solid.

Felix, I’m going to bring it back to you. This might be the hardest question of the day, actually, around ESG and all the attention that seafood gets. As we move on a little bit now from the performance over the past year.

I think it’s quite an important question and it also speaks to consumer trends a bit. I’ve seen a lot of content online – documentaries, the ocean, etcetera, etcetera. You said it earlier, right? This is really the last food we eat at scale that is hunted. So, there’s actually a pretty big responsibility towards the environment and the sea floor and everything else.

You’ve got this long-term fishing license, you’ve got that kind of visibility in terms of your operations. But your end of the bargain obviously has to be sustainable fishing practices. I’m sure we could talk about that for an hour that we don’t have. 

But I think just a few minutes around your sustainability in how you fish, perhaps specifically for those who do feel like eating fish is maybe supporting practices that are not necessarily sustainable. 

What do you guys do to address those concerns, in our waters especially?

Felix Ratheb: I think that’s a very good question, and probably the most important question, because the reality is that, as I’ve said before, we’re fortunate from a seafood-production point of view. We don’t have mad cow disease, we don’t have foot-and-mouth, we don’t have avian flu, we don’t have any of that. It’s a clean protein.

When you enter a new market, what are the questions that you get asked by consumers? And that is the sustainability practices.

But just to pause there. Firstly, we produce food, let’s be clear. It’s a critical source of protein. If you had to do that on land, you’d need twice the carbon footprint, and you’d have to tear down half the other forests. 

The best place to actually extract your food is from the ocean. However, we need to do it sustainably.

Now you will appreciate there is no way I’m going to go and spend R400 million on a new trawler if I’m damaging everything that I’m catching and it’s not going to be there in a couple of years. The paybacks are just too long.

So, we’re the first, from an industry perspective, that supports sustainable fishing practices. That drives our business. In fact, I call it our ‘licence to operate’. Without that, we don’t have a business.

So, what do we do about it? I think the first thing is that we’ve worked and supported, as I mentioned, the Marine Stewardship Council, which is the gold standard for sustainability. 

What does that do? The first part of that is to make sure that you’re not extracting more than what you need out of the oceans, because it’s not going to be there for future generations. That’s the first thing, but it doesn’t stop there. 

The second thing is that when you’re fishing, you’re interacting with other species. You’re interacting with bycatch, you’re interacting with what we call endangered and threatened species. And how do you now interact with those? 

Again, we have a standard, and standard operating procedures (SOPs) in terms of what we do there to make sure that we don’t have issues regarding our interactions with other species.

That, to us, is critical. Otherwise, we wouldn’t get our certification and we’d be all over the news.

The next one is obviously the point that you’ve made in terms of the habitat. The bottom, or the Benthic, as we call it – what are we doing to the ocean floor, etcetera, etcetera.

And that’s where there’s been a lot of misinformation from the perspective that we do not trawl corals. If you’re trawling corals with your gill, you’ll lose it. We don’t trawl fish in rocky areas. It’s dangerous. 

Generally, like most trawling companies, we’re fishing on sandy bottoms. That’s the first thing. The other thing that we’ve done in South Africa. So, the standard also doesn’t allow us to fish in sensitive habitats, so we avoid sensitive habitats.

We’re also one of the proponents – we’re not against marine protected areas. What people wouldn’t know is that we’ve got an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) which belongs to South Africa, and we have only trawled or fished 4% of that. That’s it. We’ve only touched 4% of the ocean floor in the South African EEZ. It’s not a big area. 

When we’re talking about putting marine protected areas (MPAs) in places, from our perspective it’s not a big impact. Especially what we’ve agreed as an industry (which was completely voluntary) was to ring-fence those fishing grounds. 

So what we’ve done is we’ve said, “Okay, well, we’re going to ring-fence wherever we fish, and we’re not going to go outside those areas.” So, that 4% or 5% that we fish, we’re not going outside those areas. 

If there are sensitive habitats anywhere else and we happen to have done damage 2,000 years ago, whatever it might be, we’re not going out of that. We take sustainability and fishing practices very, very seriously.

And I guess that’s how we are a responsible fishing company looking forward. And that’s whatever we give our consumer, they must know that we have done it sustainably. I think that is important. 

But it doesn’t stop there. In South Africa, most of our facilities are in rural towns. To give you an example, 30% of the Saldanha Bay town works for us.

We talk about directly working for us, but if you think about the multiplier effect – that is, people who provide food, paint the boats, do this, do that – you’ll find that it’s a much higher number.

So we are critical. And I’m just using Saldanha Bay. You go to St Helena Bay, it’s the same thing. You go to Gansbaai, it’s the same thing, etcetera.

So, we are critical to the town, which means we don’t only provide employment because people’s problems outside my factory gates become my problem. If there are social issues at home, drug abuse, alcohol abuse, we have to do something about it. 

We’re very involved in our communities. Whether it be social centres that we’ve set up, whether it be schools, whatever, we don’t tick boxes for a scorecard. The reality is that the people who work for us – it’s basically the town, and we have to do more than just provide employment. I think that is important.

The other thing that we’ve also experienced in South Africa – in the beginning, it was out of need, in fairness, but then it made a lot of business sense – is energy security and water security.

In the beginning, we had load shedding, so everybody ran to put up solar plants and wind plants. Well, quite frankly, I can tell you probably two of my best investments in terms of payback have been a wind farm that I put up in our abalone farm, which has reduced my electricity cost by 35%, and my solar plant that I put up, both in the abalone facilities as well as the dairy facilities, that has reduced my electricity cost by 25%. 

So, even without load shedding, it made a lot of sense, especially if you’re a big consumer.

Water is a big problem, particularly here in the Western Cape and particularly in the Klein Karoo and the West Coast. We’ve had to put up desalination plants. It was about five years ago that we almost ran out of water in the Western Cape, and again, we put up a desalination plant. In the beginning, it was a grudge investment, only to find later that it’s been one of the better investments. 

All these things in terms of an ESG focus, let’s call it, were initially out of need, but afterwards, make a lot of business sense. 

We’re trying to become sustainable in everything that we do. There’s a culture in our company that everything we do, whatever we touch – whether it be the sea bottom, whether it be fish, whether it be waste – the amount of work that we’ve put in to reduce waste in our business and to make sure that even if we produce waste, it’s recyclable. 

So, our commitment to our consumer: to whoever eats our piece of fish or abalone or whatever, it will come from pristine, beautiful waters, it’s healthy, it’s sustainable, and probably a little bit expensive.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, that’s a very practical answer, which I have a lot of respect for, because that is just a reality. Like you said in that answer, you do make food, and people need to eat. 

If you’re at the top of the food chain, you’re going to have some kind of footprint on the ecosystem around you, whether you are a human being, a lion or a shark. Take your pick. 

And obviously, all we can really do is try to do the best we can sustainably. So that is a nice practical view.

I’ve seen the sort of typical documentaries, and you’re right, it’s trawling through the coral, right? That’s the classic doccie approach, and it’s all very sad – I have no doubt that happens elsewhere in the world and that some companies do do this, but I’m very glad to hear that there’s a strong commitment from you that that is not happening at Sea Harvest.

So, thank you. You can eat Sea Harvest fish and feel good about it. 

Amazing that water is one of the challenges when basically you spend your lives sending ships out on the water. It’s quite incredible, right? Taking the salt out of it being the operative point.

Let’s move on from some of the ESG stuff and start to bring this to a close, then. 

Just in terms of outlook, Muhammad, I’m going to come back to you now. The Ladismith disposal is happening, and there are obviously a lot of other trends in the group.

Financial outlook for the next financial year – you’ve just come off an incredible year. This is a cyclical business, so I guess some of this might be for people just to manage their expectations a bit, right?

Muhammad Brey: I think that’s right. We’ve set ourselves a target to at least deliver R1.50 through the cycle. Outstanding year in 2025 being R2.19. And of course we want to try and get above that R1.50. 

I think from our perspective, the year ahead would be a more balanced year. There are certainly some headwinds, but also some tailwinds, and I’ll just touch on a few of those.

From a headwind perspective, we’ve had a reduction in the Total Allowable Catch (TAC) by 5%. The rand is a little bit stronger against the currencies in which we trade. We’ve seen the impact of the marine heat waves in Australia, and the Chinese markets continue to be relatively soft. Those are some headwinds that we face. 

However, I think, from a positive or tailwind perspective, we have plenty of capacity to catch our hake. We’ve got some additional capacity now to catch some more horse mackerel. So, those are some additional capacities that we have in the group to take advantage of more volume.

Hake markets are certainly firm, both locally and internationally, as we can see. We’ll certainly be targeting inflation plus plus, in terms of driving value.

In our pelagic business, we are seeing an uptick in global fish meal and fish oil prices, so that’s also a nice tailwind. And then finally, also in the pelagics business, we have some additional capacity that we’ve put on there.

So, in my view, it could be more of a balanced year going forward. I hope that answers the question.

The Finance Ghost: Marine heat wave in Australia. I didn’t even know about that. Every time I learn something new about Australia, it involves nature trying to kill you! It’s incredible, honestly. The most frightening place in the world.

Felix, as we bring this to a close – your elevator pitch to an investor considering an investment in Sea Harvest, listening to this podcast and going, “Okay, this is a business that I might want to get involved in.” 

What would you say that elevator pitch is, in terms of your investment case?

Felix Ratheb: I think we touched on a lot of it in the interview. The first one is that it’s a very defensive industry. At the end of the day, we’re producing food, and everybody’s got to eat. I think that is critical.

Secondly, we’re in an industry where supply is not going to keep up with demand. As people eat more healthily, as populations are growing, as people want more brain food, omega-3s, etcetera, move more to proteins, we’re going to see that that’s going to increase more. 

The only thing that can bring that equilibrium is price, so I do believe that we’re in an industry where we will see good price growth in basically all the sectors that we are in. 

The other thing is that we’re not just a hake business anymore. We are diversified now across many species.

My dream or vision was always to operate at every level of the ocean. So, we’ve got hake right at the bottom. We’ve got pelagics, which are further towards the top. Horse mackerel, and prawns, which are more shallow water. So, we cover the ocean in terms of the various species. 

It’s an industry with very high barriers to entry. You can’t just get quota. It’s an absolute fortune to build ships and factories.

And at the same time, what about the know-how? When somebody’s taking a R250 million asset and is having to catch 20 tonnes of fish a day, there’s a lot of IP there in institutional memory.

So I think that – and empowerment in our industry. You also have that barrier to entry that you have to be very well empowered, which we are.

We’re a rand hedge, as Mo said. Post this transaction, 64% will come from offshore across 30 geographies in hard currency. It’s the euro leading it, then the Aussie dollar and then the US dollar. Those are the currencies that we are exposed to. 

At the same time, we don’t have a single customer that’s more than 2% to 3% of our business, so we don’t have the exposure that others fear to Coles, Woolworths or Shoprite or wherever it might be. 

We’re not price takers. I think that’s critical. I’ve driven my team to be like that in every country we operate. Even if we operate in Italy, we don’t only sell to one retailer; we sell to five retailers, probably ten food service distributors. 

We’ve spread our product so that we’re not reliant on any particular customer, which sometimes can expose you to risk. We’ve seen it in Australia. 

We’ve got brands. The Sea Harvest brand is a recognised, iconic brand in South Africa. The Saldanha brand is very strong in Australia. The Shark Bay prawn brand, people would know, in terms of provenance. 

Fishing companies generate a lot of cash, so they’re good dividend payers, provided you don’t have a lot of debt. That’s why I’ve had a consistent effort to reduce debt, because we generate a lot of cash, and we’re a fantastic share to have for an investor that’s looking at a decent dividend yield. 

Finally, we’ve got a very good management team. Sometimes I look around the table, and the team that I have is probably the Springboks, in terms of – if you look at them compared to my global peers around the world, because we operate globally. 

I chair many of the international associations, and I look at the people around the table and the tenure that they’ve had in the business is quite phenomenal.

You add that all together, and I think it’s a great business, a great company to invest in. I strongly believe that most of the time, it’s undervalued because it’s not appreciated or understood by investors. 

Let’s see where we go forward. As Mo says, I don’t think we’ll see one of these record years in the next couple of years, but the point of the matter is that we need to come very close. We have some tailwinds and some headwinds, but we as management have a plan to try to protect those operating margins.

The Finance Ghost: Well, thank you both for your time. This really has been interesting. It’s a fascinating business. Tough business, but lots of cool stuff going on there. All the best to you for the period ahead. Coming off a very, very impressive base, which of course means a tough base for comparison. 

I look forward to seeing the next set of numbers coming out. Muhammad’s smiling there. He knows. I know already – I’m going to read that in an announcement, reminding people about the tough base. 

Felix, Muhammad, thank you so much. All the best, and I really appreciate your time on this.

Felix Ratheb: Thank you.

Ghost Bites (ADvTECH | FirstRand | Greencoat Renewables | Impala Platinum | Sanlam | STADIO)

More solid earnings growth at ADvTECH (JSE: ADH)

Student enrolment sounds positive as well

ADvTECH continues to just get on with it really, with a trading statement for the year ended December 2025 reflecting expected growth in HEPS of between 14% and 19%. That’s roughly 5x inflation!

This works out to around 235 cents at the midpoint of guidance, suggesting a trailing Price/Earnings (P/E) multiple of 17.6x. South Africa is still a market where you can buy high-quality companies on a PEG ratio of roughly 1.

How do you calculate that? You compare the P/E multiple to the growth rate. For example, buying a company trading on 10x, with a 10% earnings growth rate, is a PEG of 1. If the growth rate was higher, the PEG would be lower than 1.

This is just one of many valuation metrics out there, but anything at or below a PEG of 1 is worth a further look. Check out Peter Lynch’s writing on this topic if you want to learn more. I enjoy the way it bridges concepts that you’ll find in growth and value investing.

It’s also worth noting a comment by management that enrolments are in line with their expectations. That’s good news.


FirstRand’s ROE has moved even higher (JSE: FSR)

This is why the group attracts a premium valuation

FirstRand has released results for the six months to December 2025. The group is known for having a rock-solid business that generates excellent Return on Equity (ROE). Aside from some hiccups in the UK market, that reputation remains intact.

In a period in which HEPS increased by 11%, the financial services group managed to also increase ROE from 20.8% to 21.1%. This is miles ahead of the laggards in the local banking sector. To make it even more impressive, the Common Equity Tier 1 (CET 1) ratio, which essentially measures the amount of equity on the balance sheet, increased from 13.6% to 14.4%. Not only is the group in the territory of having a fortress balance sheet, but they’ve also improved their return on that balance sheet.

Earnings growth was driven by an 8% increase in net interest income (NII) and a 12% increase in non-interest revenue (NIR). In a superhuman effort in the treasury strategy, the net interest margin (NIM) somehow increased by 8 basis points despite the reduction in interest rates in the market. That is truly exceptional.

The credit loss ratio increased slightly, with the blame being laid at the door of the economy in Botswana. As people have been warning for a while now, the obliteration of profits in the diamond industry is going to have an effect there.

Including R333 million in legal costs related to the UK motor commission matter, operating expenses were up 9%. This means the cost-to-income ratio improved from 48.9% to 48.7% – another strong metric for the group.

And in case you’ve been wondering whether people have been vibe coding their corporate transactions, RMB saw growth of 16% in knowledge-based fee income.

So that’s a no, then.

I’ll leave you with one other interesting point: Wesbank is doing really well, powered by the growth in new car purchases in South Africa. Core advances at Wesbank grew by 13%, while FNB advances were up just 5%! Thanks to the lack of safe public transport in South Africa, we are a nation of car buyers – and on credit.


Greencoat Renewables is reducing debt and introducing share buybacks (JSE: GCT)

It’s all about capital management

Greencoat Renewables, as the name suggests, has a renewable energy portfolio. They have 36 assets spread across five European countries. It makes for a feel-good story, but that doesn’t mean that it also makes money.

Relying on the wind to blow is tricky. The sun is a lot more dependable, although not necessarily in Europe. And when you add in the macroeconomic shifts in the world and the effect of the yield curve, that pretty wind farm can dish up returns that are more volatile than the South-Easter in Cape Town.

In the year ended December 2025, Greencoat Renewables generated cash of €114.6 million, well down from €140.8 million in the prior period. The net asset value per share has decreased from 110.5 cents to 99.0 cents.

There’s been a modest reduction in debt from €1.26 billion to €1.21 billion. This works out to 52% of gross asset value, so these projects carry more leverage than a property fund.

The target dividend for 2026 is 6.81 cents per share, unchanged from 2025.

How do you create value in this situation?

One of the ways is to sell assets at good prices to reduce debt (they are targeting €350 million in asset disposals over the next 18 months). They hope to reduce the gearing to 45% in 2027, a far more palatable level.

Another way is through share buybacks, with a programme of €100 million kicking off and expected to run for 12 months. This represents 13% of current issued share capital. The first tranche of the programme is €25 million, running between March 2026 and September 2026. This leaves them with a long way to go towards the end of the programme, with the risk being that the share price rises into that significant buyback. I guess a rising share price is a problem they would love to have!

It would also help them tremendously if the wind blew a bit more in Europe.

A further positive update is that the company has established a new green digital infrastructure platform and its first investment. The underlying opportunity here? Data centres. Big, power-hungry data centres that need to run on renewable energy to avoid a social outcry.

The platform is a 50:50 joint venture with Schroders Greencoat. The first asset in the platform, the Drogheda Energy Park, is a brownfield project north of Dublin.

With Ireland as familiar territory for the hyperscalers, this actually sounds like a great opportunity.


Impala Platinum can thank the PGM prices for its recent performance (JSE: IMP)

That’s because other key metrics weren’t great

In the classic environment of a rising tide that lifts all boats, it’s still important to check which boats might be rusty. In mining, the best way to do this is to look at production and unit cost metrics (the “controllables”), as the price of the commodity sits outside of management’s control.

In the six months to December 2025, Impala Platinum’s Group 6E production only increased by 1%, while refined and saleable production was slightly down (even though the group uses the word “stable” to make it sound better). Unit costs increased by 11%, so they are very lucky that rand revenue per 6E ounce increased by 40%.

Capital expenditure decreased by 23%, so that gave a useful boost to free cash flow. The group achieved headline earnings of R9.3 billion and free cash flow of R7 billion.

This is a five-fold increase in earnings vs. the prior year, but we all know how well things went in this sector during periods when the mines relied on PGM price increases to cover inflationary cost pressures. It’s obviously difficult to get more of the stuff out of the ground (otherwise prices wouldn’t go up anyway due to supply deficits), but this is exactly why many have lost their shirts in this sector.

And also their shoes. Possibly their pants as well, depending who you ask.


Sanlam’s earnings have been heavily impacted by corporate activity (JSE: SLM)

The market never enjoys a period where “normalised” earnings are needed

When it comes to the financial services giants, Sanlam can never be accused of being boring. The company is always busy with some kind of corporate transaction – and usually more than one at a time.

This means that the earnings can be skewed by the specifics of the deals, especially as accounting rules are complex. Fin Acc IV lecturers get excited when they see this stuff, but everyone else starts to feel their eyes glazing over.

We therefore need to deal with the important context to these numbers that explains why the year-on-year moves are so sharp.

In the comparable period, the cessation of the Capitec partnership led to a once-off reinsurance recapture fee in the base period. There’s also the partial disposal of Shriram Finance in 2024, as well as the Namibian integration into the SanlamAllianz joint venture. And in 2025, the stake in that joint venture was reduced from 59.59% to 51%.

Now for the metrics that actually drive the numbers. For the year ended 31 December 2025, new business volumes for the group increased by 18% as reported and 22% on a normalised basis. This is a record performance for the group. Net client cash flows more than doubled, which is excellent.

Value of New Business (VNB) unfortunately went the other way, dropping by 21% as reported or 11% on a normalised basis. This was driven by product mix in South Africa, along with the various distortions detailed below.

The Net Result From Financial Services (NRFFS) moved by between -5% and 5% as reported, or increased by 15% to 25% on a normalised basis.

To add to the complexity, they are replacing NRFFS with a metric that the market is more familiar with: net operational earnings and adjusted headline earnings.

Using net operational earnings, the move was -15% to -5% as reported, or 0% to 10% normalised.

And finally, we have HEPS, which fell by between -25% and -15%. Much of this is due to the distortions, but there was also a difficult investment variance in 2025 vs. 2024 that hurt the numbers.

The market didn’t like it. And probably didn’t really understand it, either. The share price fell 5% on the day vs. a decline in the JSE All-Share of less than 1%.


STADIO manages even higher growth than its arch-rival ADvTECH (JSE: SDO)

The midpoint of core HEPS growth is north of 20%

In case you thought the abovementioned growth at ADvTECH was just a fluke in the sector, I now bring you STADIO – and the story here is even better.

For the year ended December 2025, STADIO’s trading statement reflects growth in core HEPS of between 17.1% and 27.3%. HEPS will be between 17.5% and 27.7% higher. Either way, that’s a midpoint of over 22%.

With core HEPS of between 36.9 cents and 40.1 cents, the midpoint is around 38.5 cents and hence the P/E multiple is just over 30x.

Using the PEG ratio example that I introduced you to earlier, STADIO is on a PEG of nearly 1.4x. This is a quick way to see that the market is putting a significant premium on STADIO vs. ADvTECH.

In today’s poll, I’m keen to find out which one you prefer:

225
Life after Curro - and then there were two

ADvTECH or STADIO, which one are you buying?


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • The Wiese family has reshuffled some chairs at the dining room table, with father and son doing some trades across their various entities. Titan Premier Investment has sold shares in Invicta (JSE: IVT) to Thibault Square Financial Services. The value? A casual R482 million. There’s some feel-good context for the next time you’re having a family budget conversation in the living room. Sigh.
    • Tharisa (JSE: THA) announced that the CFO sold R7.3 million worth of shares. The company secretary also got involved here, selling R980k worth of shares.
    • An executive director of KAL Group (JSE: KAL) bought shares worth R990k.
  • ArcelorMittal (JSE: ACL) has renewed the cautionary announcement related to negotiations with the IDC regarding a sustainable solution to the company’s problems. It’s clearly a very difficult situation, with the IDC needing to determine the extent to which taxpayer-subsidised funding will be dressed up as a commercial agreement. There’s a spectrum here from pure commercial terms through to a government bailout. I’m sure some kind of solution will be found, but I can’t wait to see exactly where they land on that spectrum.
  • In case you’re keeping score for Schroder European Real Estate Investment Trust (JSE: SCD), the company announced some updates in terms of leases. There’s a new lease for a property in Germany that contributes 5% of portfolio income. The 10-year lease has been signed at an 18% increase to the previous passing rent (that’s good news). A further 5% of portfolio income is at heads of terms stage on a 7-year lease (no information is given on the pricing). But before you get too excited, a property in the Netherlands (also 5% of portfolio income!) has a tenant in financial difficulties, which means Schroder is now suing for the rent. This fund has been very disappointing, with the share price down more than 20% over 3 years. Including dividends, the total return over 3 years is essentially nil.
  • enX (JSE: ENX) has released the circular for the disposal of the remaining 75% in West African International to Trichem South Africa. This actually relates to a previously negotiated deal, as Trichem is simply exercising their option here. The independent expert has determined that the minimum price under the option is towards the low end of the fair value range, but that still means that the transaction is fair. enX shareholders will need to approve this via a special resolution, as the shares represent the greater part of enX’s assets or undertaking (a Companies Act definition for a s112 resolution).
  • ASP Isotopes (JSE: ISO) is still keeping SENS busy. The latest announcement from subsidiary Quantum Leap Energy is that they’ve appointed Nate Selpeter as Chief Technology Officer. Like many of the people who work there, he’s a PH.D. and a leader in his particular field. The average IQ at ASP Isotopes is a metric that they should consider adding to their reporting!
  • Mantengu (JSE: MTU) has refinanced around R130 million in short-term debt that was payable at the end of February 2026. At Langpan and Sublime, working capital facilities have been converted into 4-year and 3-year loans respectively. That’s important breathing room for the balance sheet, with the share price closing nearly 13% higher in appreciation.

Who’s doing what this week in the South African M&A space?

Sanlam Life (Sanlam) is set to acquire a 25% economic interest in the diversified investments portfolio of the ARC Fund. The transaction entails Sanlam subscribing for a separate class of shares in African Rainbow Capital Investments for a cash consideration of R3,2 billion. The Investment Portfolio excludes the ARC Fund’s investment in African Rainbow Capital Financial Services. Through the transaction Sanlam Life will gain access to a diversified portfolio of non-financial investments which expands Sanlam Investment’s alternative assets exposure and offering.

In a significant transaction for its Spanish subsidiary, Vukile Property Fund has acquired Islazul Shopping Centre from Nutwood Invest, ultimately owned by international private equity and real estate managers. Vukile will pay €202,15 million for the large-scale retail centre which is located in Madrid. The property is being acquired at a net initial yield of c.6.5% and is expected to deliver a cash-on-cash yield in excess of 8%.

Labat Africa has agreed to acquire a 20% equity interest in Mondau, an AI and technology company. Mondau specialises in Industrial AI applications, leveraging machine learning to optimise manufacturing processes as well as environmental and data-driven solutions supporting agriculture and sustainability initiatives. The company has a net asset value of R150 million and Labat will pay R30 million for its stake in the Mozambican asset.

The newly launched new green digital infrastructure platform – a joint venture between Greencoat Renewables and SCSL Global energy Infrastructure – has made its first investment in Drogheda Energy Park, 40kms north of Dublin, Ireland.

In November 2025, Kore Potash advised that it had received approaches from two parties, each of which were evaluating the possible acquisition of the entire issued share capital of the company. One of the parties has now advised that it has decided to suspend its interest and is unable to procced for internal reasons. The other party remains engaged in the formal sale process.

Libstar, which has been trading under cautionary since September 2025 following several non-binding expressions of interest regarding the potential acquisition of all Libstar securities, has decided not to progress engagements with any potential investors. The non-binding expressions of interest received were not reflective of the fair value of the company – based on the company’s historical performance as well as its medium- to longer-term outlook.

Following the ruling by the Competition Commission and the subsequent deliberation by Transpaco’s Board, the company has decided not to appeal the prohibition of its R128 million acquisition of the Premier Plastics Group, announced in November 2025.

Inspired Evolution has successfully exited its controlling stake in Commercial Energy SA, a South African clean energy platform specialising in the ownership and operation of commercial and industrial solar photovoltaic and battery energy storage system assets. Evolution has exited to SolarAfrica Energy, a company providing a suite of capex-free green energy solutions to the commercial and industrial sectors in Southern Africa. Financial details were not disclosed.

Open Access Data Centres, a subsidiary of WIOCC Group, has acquired a portfolio of South African data centre assets from NTT DATA. The transaction comprises seven data centre facilities, strategically located in key centres across South Africa, forming an important platform with in the local digital infrastructure ecosystem. Financial details of the transaction were undisclosed.

Weekly corporate finance activity by SA exchange-listed companies

Brait has successfully placed 5,633,802 Premier Group shares on the open market at an issue price of R177.30, raising gross proceeds of R1 billion. The placing shares constitute approximately 4.4% of the total Premier ordinary shares in issue. The net proceeds will be retained for general working capital purposes, potential investment opportunities and the repayment of group debt.

Africa Bitcoin has acquired a further 0.4742 BTC for a cash consideration of R512,466 at an average price of R1,080,695 per BTC. The group now holds 5.0246 BTC with an aggregate value of R7,83 million.

AttBid, a vehicle representing Atterbury Property Fund (APF), I Faan and I Dirk, which made an offer to RMH shareholders earlier this month, has acquired in on-market transactions RMH shares. Following the transactions, AttBid and APF hold 32.77% and 7.13% respectively, resulting in an aggregate of c.39.90% of the RMH shares in issue.

Salungano has advised that it estimates that the company will be able to request the JSE lift its suspended trading from June 2026 onwards. Wesizwe Platinum says it is on track to publish the audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2025 by not later than 30 April 2026, following which it will commence the necessary steps to lift the suspension of trading in the company’s shares.

This week the following companies announced the repurchase of shares:

GreenCoat Renewables has implemented a share buyback programme totalling €100 million over 12 months with a first tranche amounting to €25 million beginning on 5 March 2026 – representing 13% of the issued share capital.

Quilter has announced it will commence a share buyback programme to repurchase shares with a value of up to £100 million in order to reduce the share capital of the company and return capital to shareholders.

In a bid to optimise its capital structure and deliver enhanced value to shareholders, iOCO continued with the repurchase of shares in the open market. During the period 30 January to 27 February 2026, a further 2,899,689 shares were repurchased at an average price per share of R4.26 for an aggregate R12,35 million. Repurchased shares are currently held as treasury shares.

Anheuser-Busch InBev’s US$2 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 23 to 27 February 2026, the group repurchased 392,609 shares for €31,25 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. This week the company repurchased a further 469,383 shares at an average price of £45.92 per share for an aggregate £21,55 million.

During the period 23 to 27 February 2026, Prosus repurchased a further 2,058,996 Prosus shares for an aggregate €90,7 million and Naspers, a further 794,130 Naspers shares for a total consideration of R717,07 million.

Four companys issued a profit warning this week: Merafe Resources, Thungela Resources, South Ocean and Sanlam.

Six companies issued or withdrew a cautionary notice: Remgro, Libstar, Tongaat Hulett, Raubex, RMH and ArcelorMittal South Africa.

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

British International Investment (BII) has committed US$25 million in financing to Rawbank, a commercial bank in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The facility will strengthen Rawbank’s ability to increase access to finance for non-mining corporates and small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) across the country.

Kenya Pipeline Company Plc announced the results of its Initial Public Offering (IPO) that closed in February. The IPO was oversubscribed at 105.7%. 11,812,644,350 ordinary shares at an offer price of KES9.00 per share were issued, raising KES106 billion (US$820 million). Trading in the shares on the NSE is expected to commence on 10 March 2026.

Phatisa has sold its majority stake in Copperbelt Agri Holdings, the holding company of Zambian table-egg producer, Goldenlay, to Vanden Avenne, a Belgian integrated feed and protein manufacturer. AgDevCo, a long-term debt provider to Goldenlay, has also exited as part of the transaction. Management will reinvest alongside Vanden Avenne, ensuring continuity and alignment as the company enters its next phase of growth. Financial terms were undisclosed.

Platinum Credit Uganda, a subsidiary of The Platcorp Group, has secured a US$4 million loan from Swiss asset manager. The investment, provided over a term of 24 months, was disbursed for deployment on December 22, 2025. The funding will be used to expand their financing for low-income households and micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) across Uganda.

Moroccan mobility startup, Weego, has raised US$1,1 million in a new funding round led by Azur Innovation Fund. Weego operates a mobility-as-a-service (MaaS) application that integrates multiple transportation options into a single platform. The investment will support the expansion of the company’s MaaS platform and accelerate its growth across African markets.

Globeleq has acquired a 51% equity stake in Lunsemfwa Hydro Power Company (LHPC) from Norfund. The remaining 49% of LHPC is owned by Wanda Gorge Investments, a Zambian-based infrastructure investment company. LHPC, based in Kabwe, Zambia’s Central Province, operates two hydroelectric power plants with a combined capacity of 56 MW and is constructing a 27 MWp solar PV project. Its growth pipeline includes a 200 MWp solar portfolio and various hydropower expansions. The financial terms were not disclosed.

Oyass Capital has invested in Senegal’s Eyone Medical through a financing of XOF1 billion (US$1,8 million), supplemented by non-financial support via dedicated technical assistance. The funding will be used in the deployment of the Single Patient Record, a strategic project led by the State of Senegal aimed at modernizing the health system and improving patient care.

The risks of shadow AI in M&A transactions

In technology-focused M&A transactions, value related to material data increasingly resides in AI models, rather than traditional source code. This shift creates new challenges for buyers conducting due diligence investigations. “Shadow-AI” tools and models developed and implemented outside of formal governance pose particular risks that can affect valuation, legal compliance and post-closing integrations. For buyers, identifying and managing these hidden risks is essential to protecting value and avoiding unforeseen liabilities.

“Shadow AI” refers to AI models, scripts or datasets created by employees outside formal approval and governance processes and procedures. These tools are often undocumented and poorly controlled. While the use of Shadow AI may start as experiments or for simple tasks, it creates hidden technical and regulatory risks that can affect valuation, risk allocation, and addressing post-closing obligations.

Shadow AI typically arises when teams, or individual employees, bypass internal checks and procurement processes which relate to AI tools. Privacy reviews, data right assessments and security controls are often overlooked. Common risks include training models on personal data without a lawful basis, scraping data in breach of website terms, using open-source components with restrictive licences, or exposing confidential information to third-party AI tools. Once these tools feed into live systems or client deliverables, they can contaminate outputs and create uncertainty around intellectual property (IP) ownership.

A policy checklist and forensic checks are not sufficient to assess Shadow AI risks. There are further measures which buyers should consider when evaluating technology companies, such as:

  • scanning code repositories for unapproved models, notebooks and pipelines;
  • running licence and dependency checks to identify restrictive or non-compliant components;
  • reconstructing data lineage using system logs, cloud usage records, storage inventories and model registries to understand what data was used for training, and whether the data ownership rights are sound;
  • testing prompts and outputs for signs of copied content, bias or safety issues;
  • interviewing engineers and applied scientists, not just management; and
  • reviewing access controls, API keys and use of third party AI tools to identify unapproved services.

Where Shadow AI is detected, buyers typically require focused clean-up plans and should negotiate specific legal protections. Buyers should insist on targeted indemnities covering IP infringements related to AI use, privacy breaches, and violation of AI platform terms. Buyers should also tighten warranties around data provenance, model governance and the use of third-party AI tools. This gives the buyer a walk-away right if undisclosed issues surface later in the M&A process.

Warranty and indemnity insurance is not a cure-all. AI-related risks are frequently excluded and, where cover is available, premiums tend to reflect how mature and credible the target’s data and AI governance really is.

A transaction is usually affected by the use of Shadow AI in the following ways:

  • the price is reduced to reflect retraining costs and data contamination risks. A portion of the consideration is deferred, linked to completing data re-licensing, fixing edge-case model performance, and closing privacy gaps;
  • specific indemnities are included to cover IP claims linked to legacy scraping and code issues, backed by escrow; and
  • closing conditions include obtaining outstanding data consents, completing privacy impact assessments, and decommissioning the Shadow AI notebooks, with retraining done in a controlled environment.

Sellers should not wait for due diligence investigations to address Shadow AI. Conducting internal audits, documenting data provenance, and implementing clear AI governance policies before going to market can reduce price reductions, limit indemnity exposure, and accelerate deal timelines. Proactive remediation signals credibility and strengthens the seller’s negotiating position.

Consider a multinational company with thousands of employees across various departments. What happens if 10% of these employees begin using an AI tool that integrates into everyday systems to improve spelling and grammar in emails, documents, slideshows and messaging?

This scenario gives rise to several issues which directly reflect the Shadow AI risks discussed above:

  1. Lack of visibility: Management does not know this tool is being used, or by whom it is being used, creating governance gaps that arise when employees bypass internal checks.
  2. Data exposure: There is no oversight of what information is being input into the tool, risking the exposure of confidential or personal data to third-party AI services.
  3. Unclear licensing terms: The AI tool’s terms and conditions may grant a broad license, allowing the provider to use, modify and disseminate any data input, including using that data to train the provider’s own AI models.
  4. Delayed detection: These risks are unlikely to surface until something goes wrong – for example, when a competitor gains access to strategic information or a claim is brought because confidential customer data has been inadvertently used.

For buyers in an M&A transaction, identifying and pricing such risks becomes critical. The due diligence measures outlined above – reviewing access controls, API keys and third-party AI usage – are designed to uncover precisely these scenarios before they affect deal value or create post-closing liabilities.

In conclusion, there is an increased value in the data which a business owns. Shadow AI is a growing commercial, technical and regulatory concern which needs to be accounted for in M&A transactions. There are measures which can be implemented in the due diligence process to identify Shadow AI risks, and to mitigate the damage which may be caused by the use of Shadow AI. This allows for the business value to be accurately assessed and for Shadow AI risks to be accounted for in any M&A transaction.

Tayyibah Suliman is a Director and Head: Technology and Communications and Sadia Rizvi and Izabella Balkovic Associates | Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr

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

Taking stock of Private Capital Markets

As investors look ahead to 2026, South Africa enters the year with a more supportive macroeconomic backdrop than in the recent past. A stronger rand (up 13% against the dollar over the past year), easing inflation, and a lower interest rate environment have helped stabilise business conditions and improve sentiment across capital markets. These factors, combined with improved electricity availability, have reduced input costs for companies and created a more favourable operating environment.

Public capital markets reflected this improvement during 2025, with strong equity performance from the JSE All Share Index, which delivered a 46.4% return for the year. This was driven largely by mining stocks and the global gold rally, with the gold price exceeding $4000 an ounce for the first time. While listed capital markets are expected to remain resilient, investors are increasingly reassessing portfolio diversification, prompting a renewed focus on private capital markets as a source of differentiated and potentially higher long-term returns.

Private market activity in 2025 was characterised by selective dealmaking rather than broad-based expansion. Infrastructure and utilities continued to dominate transaction volumes1, reinforcing South Africa’s role as a key destination for renewable energy and industrial modernisation capital in Africa. Financial services also remained a cornerstone sector, reflecting both domestic demand and regional expansion opportunities.

Despite this activity, fundraising conditions remained challenging. Fundraising cycles lengthened, capital became more selective, and valuation sensitivity increased2. At the same time, exit activity began to accelerate, driven by both strategic sales and secondary transactions, signalling the early stages of improved liquidity across portfolios in private capital markets.

Infrastructure remains one of the most attractive sectors for private capital in South Africa, supported by long-dated cash flows, inflation-linked revenues, and strong alignment with the Government’s development priorities. Transport, logistics, water and energy infrastructure continue to draw both local and international investors, particularly where projects benefit from public-private partnerships and development finance support.

Renewable energy continues to be a core focus area, underpinned by South Africa’s structural power deficit and the government’s policy support for private power generation. Utility-scale renewables, battery storage and distributed energy solutions are attracting sustained investment as businesses and municipalities seek energy alternatives and security. The sector also benefits from growing appetite for climate-aligned investments and blended finance structures that enhance risk-adjusted returns.

Data centres are emerging as a high-growth investment theme, driven by accelerating digitalisation, cloud adoption and demand for local data sovereignty. South Africa’s role as a regional technology hub, combined with improving energy availability and fibre infrastructure, positions the country as a key destination for data centre investment. While capital-intensive, the sector offers lucrative long-term returns and increasing interest from global strategic and infrastructure investors.

One of the most significant structural shifts expected to continue into 2026 is the growth of private credit. In South Africa, private credit emerged more visibly between 2020 and 2022, as banks tightened lending standards and businesses sought alternative sources of capital. By 2025, the asset class had gained broader acceptance among institutional investors.

In 2026, private credit is likely to attract further inflows as investors prioritise contractual cash flows, downside protection and more predictable liquidity profiles. While return potential is typically lower than private equity, private credit’s flexibility in structuring, shorter duration and lower volatility makes it an increasingly attractive complement within diversified private market portfolios.

Private equity continues to offer the prospect of higher long-term returns, but liquidity constraints remain a defining factor. Extended fund lives and muted distributions over recent years have placed pressure on investors, particularly those managing allocation limits and cash-flow planning.

In response, private equity firms are exploring alternative liquidity solutions. Globally, continuation funds have become a common tool, allowing general partners to transfer mature assets into new vehicles while providing optional liquidity to existing investors. In South Africa, private equity firms are increasingly recognising the opportunity to create liquidity through permanent capital vehicle structures, which offer greater flexibility than traditional continuation funds.

Permanent capital vehicles allow investors to achieve liquidity while enabling those with conviction in an asset’s long-term growth to maintain their exposure. At the same time, they reduce pressure on private equity firms to exit assets at unfavourable valuations, a common constraint of traditional fund structures. While still nascent locally, permanent capital vehicle structures represent a potential evolution in South Africa’s private equity landscape.

Direct private equity investment by South African pension funds is limited by Regulation 28 of the Pension Funds Act, which caps exposure at 15%. In practice, many pension fund managers are not fully utilising this allowance due to operational challenges like fee structures. As a result, institutional investors are increasingly turning to actively managed ETFs to address liquidity while retaining long-term private market exposure. These vehicles provide liquidity for private equity investments, reducing pressure on private equity firms and enabling continued access to attractive private market returns without heightened liquidity risk.

The private capital outlook for 2026 is defined more by balance than turbulence. Investors are operating in a market shaped by improved macro stability, heightened selectivity, valuation discipline and liquidity awareness. The South African private capital market in 2026 offers compelling opportunities through a range of investment prospects across infrastructure, renewable energy, digital assets and growth-oriented businesses. Careful attention to key trends, such as the rise of private credit, evolving exit strategies, and sector-specific growth themes, will enable investors to reassess portfolios and capitalise on value-creation opportunities.

1 https://www.africaprivateequitynews.com/
2 https://www.avca.africa/media/jpspd4gb/avca25-14-apca-q3_3.pdf?id=a0SP3000003QzsX

Khanyisile Malebe is a Corporate Financier | PSG Capital.

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

Ghost Stories #94: Shoprite’s secret sauce: value retail culture meets omnichannel

Listen to the show using this podcast player:

Get ready for a masterclass in retail from Pieter Engelbrecht, CEO of South Africa’s largest employer. If you’re ready to learn about the secrets to Shoprite’s success, you’re in the right place.

It starts with the culture and commitment to delivering value to customers. You can then add the power of investment in data and systems, creating the foundation for an omnichannel model that has positioned Checkers as the biggest brand in South Africa – and not just in retail.

With the South African retail sector having to navigate tremendous challenges, Shoprite keeps coming out on top.

But how do they do it?

This podcast deals with topics like:

  • The “secret sauce” at Shoprite and the culture in the group.
  • The importance of inflation in the retail business model and how deflation makes things much tougher.
  • The difference between Shoprite’s measure of inflation and the Official Food Basket used by the SARB in making decisions.
  • The power of the Checkers brand and how Shoprite has taken it right to the top in South Africa – as anyone with a toddler on a Sixty60 bike can confirm!
  • How value retailers can achieve such strong gross margins through efficiencies.
  • The omnichannel strategy and the parallels to a global giant like Walmart.
  • The elevator pitch for why an investor should consider Shoprite.

Shoprite believes strongly in the value of Ghost Mail in the South African investment ecosystem. They have sponsored this podcast for readers, but I was allowed to ask whatever I wanted to ask. Please do your own research and do not treat this podcast as an endorsement of Shoprite as an investment.

Full transcript:

The Finance Ghost: Welcome to this episode of the Ghost Stories podcast. Pretty big deal for me today. We are in earnings season, and today I get to speak to a man who is responsible for the largest employer in South Africa. That is a pretty big responsibility when he wakes up in the morning.

I sometimes feel scared that I have to write a newsletter for 40,000 people and not make any mistakes. That pales in comparison to what Pieter Engelbrecht is responsible for.

So, Pieter, thank you so much for doing this. You’ve released your interim results at Shoprite. I watched the presentation this morning. It’s amazing, what you guys have built, so congratulations.

And perhaps most of all, thank you for this podcast and for bringing these insights to the Ghost Mail audience.

Pieter Engelbrecht: Certainly, thank you very much for the opportunity.

The Finance Ghost: No, it’s a great pleasure, and I’m really looking forward to honestly just getting all of these insights from you, there’s so much to learn.

So I did watch, of course, the results presentation this morning, and congratulations, well done. And certainly, one of the key factors that came through is this very low inflation in South Africa, even price deflation actually. And we’ll speak about that just now. We will dig into that.

I know it’s a passion point for you, and as you correctly pointed out this morning, the regulators are making decisions around inflation, and your numbers look quite different to the official numbers. So we will dig into that for sure.

But before we get to that, I think the question on everyone’s lips really, is around understanding the ‘special sauce’ at Shoprite. Not the sauce you’ll find in the aisle, but the sauce that goes through the entire business.

Because – is it something they put in the water there in Brackenfell? I don’t know what it is, but somehow you just manage to you make it work. There’s been a bit of a slowdown, yes, in Supermarkets RSA, but you are still running way ahead of your competitors. I mean certainly my perception – and I won’t ask you to comment on competitors – Woolworths is keeping you honest in Checkers right now, but Pick n Pay is in disarray. Spar, as a wholesaler, is definitely landing in that same WhatsApp group. 

It’s a tough environment for retail. We’ve seen a lot of pain in the apparel names as well. It’s really difficult. And yet, here you are, sales growth from continuing operations up 7.2%. 

What is in the water in Brackenfell? What is happening there? How are you doing this at Shoprite?

Pieter Engelbrecht: It’s already a 10-year journey. It started in 2017 when I became the CEO. One of the first things that I thought would make a difference is obviously our people. 

You mentioned that we’re the largest private employer, 170,000 people, and then you exclude all those peripheral merchandisers and trolley collectors, cleaners, DC personnel etc. So, it’s actually a much larger audience.

And for me, the number one thing was, that there must be mutual respect. So, it was driven very hard in terms of behaviour, because retail is a tough business. We’re not always the most sophisticated people. But it doesn’t mean you can be disrespectful.

Hence, it was driven so hard. This past Christmas visit (every year in December month I try to visit as many stores as I can, to get a feel for what’s happening in the business and maybe if we make some fundamental errors, I can pick it up, and we can fix it) –  the attitude of the staff, towards their customers and in general, towards each other, was for me amazing. 

I said to them in our first January meeting for the year, it was my best visit ever because of the people. 

I don’t take leave; I just don’t come into the office for a couple of days. But in that time people come up to me and say, “But what is happening there at Shoprite and Checkers?”

I say “No, what’s happening?”

They say, “No, the people are so amazing, there is almost this feeling of, ‘Nothing is too much’. If we make a mistake, the manager gets in his car, brings you a hamper, apologises, and we try again – try and learn from our mistakes”.

My executive assistant next to me is also responsible for the call centre, so we scrutinise that all the time. If we make a mistake, we go all out to fix it. And we’ve got this saying in Shoprite (meaning the group) that “No customer leaves the store unhappy”. And then we expanded that later on, to say, “The sun doesn’t set on a customer complaint”. 

I took that from a Xhosa sentence, that says: “Sebenza kakhulu, ilanga liyashona.”

Which directly translated is: You must work hard because the sun is drawing water. Almost saying, that the sun is setting. And then I came up with this thing to say, “The sun will not set on a customer complaint”.

And I think if you combine all of this in such a big workforce, it’s the general attitude of people. There are always exceptions, but there is nothing we don’t do to please our customers, and we live by it. That is the best explanation I can give you.

The Finance Ghost: So, Pieter, thanks. I think what you’ve spoken to directly there is the culture of the group. Which makes sense, because when you’ve got 170,000 people trying to pull together in a particular direction, then there’s no doubt that the culture has to work. That’s the only way that it’s going to actually come right. 

So maybe not something they put in the water at Brackenfell, but maybe an understanding that the water is going to get taken away by the sun, as you said. 

And so, you need to make sure that you do all these things properly, which is very cool. Look, whatever the secret sauce is there, it’s clearly hard to replicate – because otherwise your competitors would be doing so. 

And they aren’t – because one of the stats in this set of numbers, is, as per Nielsen, you are growing at 2.3x the rest of the market, which is pretty incredible. So I think let’s dig into some of the components of that.

I really want to make sure that we cover inflation properly, so let’s do that now. It’s a key factor in your business.

And before we dig into internal selling price inflation versus official inflation, I just want to make sure for investors – who maybe haven’t worked in grocery retail or aren’t that close to it – why is inflation such an important component of your sales growth as a retailer? As opposed to just volumes growth, for example?

Why does inflation matter so much?

Pieter Engelbrecht: The simple answer would be that you may be growing volume, but the monetary value is not growing in line. So how are you going to cover your costs? Because the cost inflation is multiple times of your topline inflation. And that’s the problem. So that’s the short answer about why inflation is important to us. 

The second part of it is, of course, because we’re so customer-focused, we have to be focused on how it affects their basket. So, it’s not all bad. For consumers, low inflation or deflation is fantastic.

In December alone, 14,000 items were cheaper than last year. That’s great for consumers, but we have a cost base to cover, and that’s just when this whole discussion comes in. 

And then, you did mention, I never speak about competitors. You mentioned one in the premium market. Their internal inflation was over 7%. We went into deflation in December. And although for the six months, Shoprite Group outgrew the market 2.3 times, in December it was 5.3 times and in January it was 4 times. And this has been a continuation over the last six years, month by month.

So, it’s not a “one swallow” story kind-of-thing. There is a consistency of improvement and execution, and I have to bring it back to the incredible people of Shoprite who can execute like nobody else.

And you know, years ago, we were criticised because we don’t have a franchise model, and why not? Most of the largest oppositions have got big franchise businesses. 

Then COVID happened, and after that the KwaZulu-Natal unrest. And at that point, (and I must say, including Sixty60) – it was all part of the same story, really, how the one flew into the next, and the one happened after the other.

But all of a sudden at that point, we realised that our corporate model is actually to our advantage. Because we’ve got real-time information, we’ve got real-time view on stock. And in crises, we can sit here, where I’m now sitting in this room, at that time, we had 4am meetings on unrest, and we’d make a decision, and two hours later, before the sun was up, 3,000 stores would have executed whatever we decided to do. 

That strength of that has become what we almost thought was our Achilles’ heel. But it actually became the strength of Shoprite. The fact that we can take a decision, and an hour later I get a thousand photos to show that it’s executed.

Still on the inflation, I mentioned one retailer who’s not price-sensitive, so they can add up their prices as much as they want. But we are a value-retailer in the Checkers brand. It’s still fantastic for me, since last year, that Checkers has become the number one brand in South Africa. 

I did say in this morning’s presentation that I know of no retailer, globally, where a food retailer has become a “loved” brand. It’s what we all dream about.

I had wedding photos with a Sixty60 theme… 

The Finance Ghost: …I have many photos of my kids on their little delivery bike, I can tell you. “Look, the Checkers man, the Checkers man!”. I promise you. It’s basically a cult. It’s the cult of four-year-olds. And apparently weddings. 

Pieter Engelbrecht: [Laughs]. Ya, there’s actually a long story I could tell you around the wedding thing… I wanted to do one on an airplane but eventually aviation didn’t give us approval to do it, they said people weren’t going to follow protocol.

[Laughs]

So those were all natural and sent to me a gesture. 

But coming back to the inflation thing: so first we must say deflation. People think prices never come down – that’s a general perception, people think that prices just never come down, they always just go up and up. But it’s not true. There I mentioned, 14,000 items that were lower than last year.

Some of the categories where we over-index, like potatoes, rice, maize, etc. were up to -40, -50%, deflation. So, half the price of last year. 

So, I think the South African consumer benefitted a lot from this.

If you sit on the other side – and we’re a publicly-listed company where our shareholders demand performance, dividends, and results – the cost base is a problem. 

Without naming or shaming or anything, I live in Stellenbosch, and my rates, taxes, water – my municipal bill – have gone up by 35% this year. Now, I didn’t get a 35% salary increase.  So how are you going to pay for that?

And I’m using this example because everybody’s in that boat. You now have to sacrifice something else. Because you didn’t get that kind of increase, that your cost inflation is. And so, we can go through a lot of line items where the cost inflation is just not – the cost of living has increased exponentially in South Africa.

And that’s why I say, when I think about my consumer, I’m very happy for them. We’re trying our best to give them better prices every day. That’s why I say, I know of no retailer in the world that sells a R1 item (6 US cents) for a packet of chocolate biscuits, there are 18 biscuits in the packet, and a packet of chips for R1. And making a kid happy.

That’s what we do. But in the end now we have to try and balance the whole income statement.

And that’s why we were also criticised for that for some time, about the high amount – or maybe it sounds high, but in context – of capex that we spend every year. So, for three years now, maybe even longer, we’ve spent R8 billion a year on systems, technology, AI, you name it. 

And I said five years ago, if you’re not going to make those investments, to have a tool and have artificial intelligence and all these things helping you to make the best possible decisions based on your data set… 

And there we are very fortunate. We’ve got 34 million customers, extra savings customers. We have an over 90% swipe rate. Over 90% of the people, when they shop, swipe their card. So, we can see what they’re buying: if they are in distress, if they are downsizing, if they are shifting categories, something new is coming, people are buying in a new category, so there is a trend change. 

That is why I made this statement to say that the young people, the Gen Zs, they think differently about pets and children and how their lives must be. And much healthier than what we are (or me). I look at my son – and they’re very healthy in terms of what they eat. These days you have to be very alert to what’s on the product list.

People want to know: is there added sugar? What is the protein content? What is the fat? These are all things that the data and all the system investments that we’ve done are helping us with, to give the customer a better experience. 

If you then add to that, staff that have a proper customer service inclination, attitude; it makes a strong combination. I think that’s probably the gist of what’s happened in the entire market. 

Retail in South Africa is at a crossroads, I think. We can see it in the results, food retail in particular. I’ve spoken about the franchise model. We know about the court cases going on and the fights here and there, but I could see that over time the pressure on the gross margin was incredible on the franchisees, and a lot of them are not making money anymore.

The ones that are doing well are those that own also the property that they trade from. You can then cross-subsidise yourself.

But in general, if I’m a one- or two-store owner, where do I go, how do I monetise this investment? Retail franchise started let’s say roughly about 30 years or 35 years ago. A lot of good retailers left the corporates and opened a franchise, and they built up a fantastic business.

They worked hard, but could build a good life. 

Now they’re at let’s say, retirement age, and they want to monetise the investment. How? I mean, you’re talking millions here. A store these days doesn’t cost R1 or R2 million to build and stock – equipment and aircon and generators and you name it. The only probable buyer is Shoprite. But we can’t, because we won’t be allowed to, because of Comp Comm and all of these things. 

And maybe while I’m saying that to you, I also want to say that competition will always be there. I don’t think there should be a fear that Shoprite is going to own 100% of the market. I don’t think that is a possibility. It cannot happen.

But even if it had to happen, the one thing I can assure you is that Shoprite will never abuse that position. Our customers and the value that we give them is not changing. 

That’s why I get this question quite a lot. Of all the FMCG retailers in South Africa, food retailers, we’ve got the highest gross profit margin. Not because we have the highest prices, everyone can see our prices. You can compare them every day. It’s because of efficiencies, and the way we think about how and what we give our consumers. 

Having said that we’re running that kind of margin, people ask me: “But can this go higher?” And then my standard answer is, “I would not like to.”

I think if we can maintain ourselves through thick and thin; difficult and good circumstances; economic growth and not economic growth; if we can maintain our margin and especially our trading profit margin of around 6%, then that’s good. And that’s what we will honour. And then we also know we are also giving the best value to our consumers.

So even in a scenario where, let’s say, the market share of Shoprite grows more, there will never be a situation in which we will profiteer, or not look after the customer’s interest in the first instance.

The Finance Ghost: So much good stuff in there, I could listen to you talk about retail literally all day. There’s a lot of really interesting stuff. 

You raised a lot of points there. You talked about the costs that you face, and how important inflationary increases are for that. And municipal rates are just one example. It’s energy costs, it’s security, it’s all that kind of stuff – that makes it really difficult. 

And I think I’ve used the analogy before that it feels like in grocery retail, it’s the big snake. It’s the python squeezing the impala. You are the python in case that’s not incredibly obvious to someone listening to this. There are a few impalas, and I think what those impalas all have in common, is exactly the point you’ve raised, which is that they are franchise businesses. 

I’ve written a lot about that, and I totally understand that point. To be able to do what you do (including things like omnichannel; Sixty60), you need to know where the stock is, where it’s actually sitting, so that you can fulfil.

I’m okto talk about your competitors, but I remember when Woolworths went and bought up their franchisees all those years ago – that’s why they can still compete with you.

It feels like everyone else who’s trying to actually make this work with a franchise network is really, really struggling. And it’s just fascinating how everything has gone in this direction. It’s such an interesting industry.

I definitely want to make sure we finish on the inflation point with that slide you had, which I know is important to you. I found it very interesting – around how you measure food inflation versus, let’s call it, “official food inflation” – the basket that decisions are made on. 

I cannot believe how high our interest rates are in South Africa right now versus what I see on the ground. And I’m guessing you probably share that view, at least to some extent.

So, I’d like you to speak about that, and, you know, maybe someone at the SARB is listening.

Pieter Engelbrecht: I definitely share your sentiment. I mean, we’re so desperate for economic growth in this country. We know that it will change everything. We can’t continue just paying more grants and more grants while we actually pay it with debt. I mean it’s not like it’s money we generate; we borrow that money and it comes with an interest rate.

So, it does bother me that for quite a while now, we have such a big discrepancy between the official food inflation, and what we calculated. And not only us – I also want to refer to my peers. There is so much data available. It’s not that I want to poke in someone’s eye and say, “Listen, you’re doing something wrong”. I’m just questioning, how can we be only 5% different? And all the retailers have the same number, except one? 

So, now we are sitting at – the lending rate is now 10.2%. We cannot sit in a scenario where we say, “We’re at 10.2% because we’ve got a target to reduce inflation” and we say food inflation is 4.7%, yet the retailers come and say, “But we are actually in deflation.” 

Not only us – we can ask all the manufacturers, (I refer to them as brand owners, all the big ones in South Africa, there are many), and they will tell you the same story. They’ve got the same data. 

So, it’s not as if we are short on data to be able to be as accurate as we could possibly be, to then help to make best monetary policy decisions. So that’s actually the big point that I was trying to make. 

And then the difference in calculation, to put it very simply, is that the current official CPI on food is a static basket of about 450 items. That was a basket based in the height of loadshedding and that. So that basket looks quite different from what the basket looks like today. 

We take – like in December, when we calculate our internal inflation (we do it every month), both cost and selling, we measure 56,000 items that were bought in December, and we then take into account combination buys, multi-buys, promotional items. And then say, okay, what was the price of these 56 items last year in December? And that’s our official inflation. 

For me that is the truest reflection of what the real consumer inflation is. What I experience, because I made some choices – I changed brands, I buy more multi-buys, or I’m using my Xtra Savings card. You change your shopping behaviour, maybe you also change your diet – and I have different needs from when the market and the macro environment was completely different. 

And that was the point that I just tried to make, is that it does concern me a little bit. Maybe that’s an understatement, but we’re not getting the economy to kickstart.  

I said this morning, there are a lot of things that I’m seeing that can assist. I also said, “Hope is not a strategy.” I can’t live in hope that all the money that governments secure from the countries and donors etc. is going to be invested in infrastructure, because that will definitely create jobs, will kick start the economy. 

We need the interest rates to come down. We cannot run at an over a 10% interest rate, if our inflation is actually not 5% but actually 1%, or 0.5%. That’s as simplistically as I can explain my thinking to you. 

The Finance Ghost: I certainly agree with you about the state of play out there. You can certainly see it better than anyone in the stats that you have. 

I think if you just look at how South Africans are spending on areas like online gambling – what is that at the end of the day? It’s the sale of hope. Like you say, hope is not a strategy, but when you are struggling – and we don’t have a large economy and we do not create jobs – then you will try to find that hope where you can. 

And a lot of people believe that they can online bet and gamble their way out of it – because that’s what the adverts are implying. It’s very sad, and a lot of it would get better if we could just be a little bit less strict with interest rates. 

So maybe someone, somewhere is listening. There I am willing to live in hope.

But maybe let’s move on from inflation then, and monetary policy, into the stuff you can control.

Omnichannel is certainly top of that list now. I recently reviewed Walmart’s results, and Omnichannel has been a huge part of their story. They’ve been telling the market about how profitable it is. It’s efficient fulfilment, it’s having the data, it’s the advertising layer that comes with it – it’s great to see that overseas. 

Now, I see a lot of parallels with your business. And I know that you’re maybe not at the point where you’re talking about it as much as say, Walmart is – I picked that up in this morning’s presentation, certainly – but I guess it’s this overlay, right? It’s eCommerce, it’s AI, it’s logistics efficiencies, it’s the way that you can run this business at this incredible gross margin, but without having high prices. 

All of this adds up into having, in my opinion, just the perfect machine for omnichannel. I look at what Walmart’s built, and I look at you, and I can see some really good similarities around how you’re actually building this thing out. 

So, Sixty60 feels like it’s actually in early days in this journey. I just see it as a fulfilment engine across everything you’re building. Even if it maybe started out as “Get your stuff from Checkers”. Is that fair? To the extent you can talk about it and comment on that – am I thinking about it the right way? 

Pieter Engelbrecht: Ja, you’re spot on. But before I go into the omnichannel, something on the gambling thing. I had a different view to one of my competitor’s CEOs. And I then, on Christmas Day actually, acknowledged to him that he was right, because one of the banks shared with us, some information on Black Friday. 

Now Black Friday, that is an enormous day for Shoprite. And you know I said in the presentation that we’ve done exceptionally well. So let me just say that on such a day, we’re doing well north of a billion rand, and one of those banks, only one, said to me, on that day, they equalled Shoprite’s turnover in online gambling vouchers.

That blew my mind. I didn’t expect that. 

If, on top of the inflation or deflation, you sit that – call it a billion rand or whatever – that should have gone to food or food-related products (or a large portion of it), it’s now gone into a black hole.  It is something that needs attention.

I was asked what I’m going to do about it. There’s nothing I can do. I’m not the regulator. It’s not our job. There are people that understand that stuff much better than us. I just wanted to give you that sort of titbit of info.

Back on the omnichannel – we also made mistakes. Not everything we do works and is perfect, we just have this policy of “fail fast”. When we started with the idea of online, you will remember that our competitors have been online for much longer than us – 20 years ago.

But I never liked the concept of a web-based buying platform for food. Here’s how I can explain this the easiest. 

So you log in, you’re now into Checkers, then you go where? You want to buy milk. You go to, refrigerated or chilled product. Okay, next click, you go, milk. Next click: there are 14 brands. So which brand are you going to buy? Next click is, what size? 500 ml, 1 litre, 2 litres, 3 litres? Then we go, is it low-fat, 2%, full-cream, skim? Okay, now… finally nine clicks later, I have a (bottle of) milk in my basket. That can mos never work. 

The Finance Ghost:  [Laughs] That sounds like more work than to go to the store.

Pieter Engelbrecht: But we also started with what the world has been doing. Ocado and them. And we had three distribution centres in the country (fulfilment centres) for pet and liquor. We tried those two. But we failed dismally. Very quickly. 

It’s just not a sustainable model in South Africa. Long distances you have to travel, the cost of travelling, and the stock availability. Say somebody orders a bottle of wine from you, let’s say in Johannesburg, but now you don’t have a stock of it in that fulfilment centre, now that bottle of wine has to come from Cape Town all the way to Joburg. It just can’t work. 

Then COVID happened, we had this thing: it needs to be app-driven. By then, we had already invested in the systems. We had a real-time view of the stock. What we thought was our Achilles’ heel, our wide spread of stores, all of a sudden became a benefit. 

We realised, if we can pick from stores, within 90% of our addressable market we have plenty in terms of our store locations to fulfil from. And my only request at the time was that it was mission-driven.

That’s how we started. We started with like 500 products, and it was mission-driven in the sense that if you want to braai, then we might have ten items), you want to have breakfast, we have a collection of items. That’s how we started, and that’s how it evolved.

Now, it’s become true omnichannel. We have “pet” on there, all the rest of the businesses are coming onto that super-app. You’ll be able to navigate seamlessly between groceries (milk like I just said), to outdoor, to pet, to your pharmacy, your vitamins. So that’s what we’re building. 

And then, of course, on top of that, there’s the drive on financial services, and also pharmacare. Because we saw from the data that there’s a tendency among customers. – when we were big in clothing, we learned the same thing – that at some point, without explanation or anything triggering it, customers started to not buy clothing at the hypermarkets.

It almost felt like people didn’t want to buy a shirt for work and throw it into a trolley with their milk and their chicken.

That’s how apparel stores then started to expand, and we saw a lot of retailers going into clothing. And now we see a similar trend in personal care, in health and beauty.

I get the impression that people feel, “Something I’m going to put on my face, doesn’t belong next to the chicken in my shopping trolley.” 

Hence why we have this target to increase our pharma footprint. We have Transpharm, the wholesaler, and we have 140 pharmacy licences. So, we’re already in the game, we’re starting to take them out of the stores and into specialised separate standalone stores. And they’ performing very well.

It’s now a question of time, because what’s the best location that any retailer would want?  It’s to be right next to Shoprite’s or Checkers’ front door, because they do all that hard work to pull the people there, and then you just fish off that, if you’re close by. 

Those are very sought after premises, so it will take us time to get those sites for our own pharmacare ambition. 

Then the other part is the financial services. I said that at the end of last year – that we re-platformed the system, and we have in the meantime opened / started / launched (very low-key) a money market account that’s free of charge within our environment. There’s only a charge to withdraw money, a R5 fixed fee. If you compare that to an ATM charge, there’s a big difference, because we expect you to go spend that money somewhere else. 

There are a lot of things happening in the financial services world. I want to reverse a step, to say we spoke about the economy, and that the economy has to drive and grow. I think, because that economy has been shrinking, we’re now all meddling in each other’s businesses.

Telkom guys are into insurance and micro-advances; the retailers are going into banking. So we’re all in each other’s businesses, because we are all looking to grow. How do we do that if the economy is not growing? 

I think that is what’s been happening in the environment. We’re very lucky that in the last 10 years or so, 8 years, we generated a lot of cash. We were able to spend 3% percent of revenue on capex, and invest in the systems, the supply chain. That has opened a lot of doors for us. It’s a busy place here in Brackenfell, I can tell you.

We have to run here! [laughs] 

But I think that is what’s been happening, and we’re in a very fortunate position, such that we could invest, pre-invest to enable us to be in these markets. There are a lot of negotiations and talks going on. As usual, we will tell you, as and when we conclude.  Not before. We like to deliver and then we tell you, instead of promising you what we’re going to do.

The Finance Ghost: I actually wrote on X earlier that I’m grateful to wake up in the morning and not run a business that competes with Shoprite. Although now I’m slightly scared you might get into financial media as well, based on that – because it sounds like nothing’s safe. 

But jokes aside, you’re right. Everyone is in everyone else’s economic profit pool – and it’s a function of growth.

My thesis is: distribution and brand wins. If people can find you, and they trust you, they will buy different things from you. We know that’s how South Africans behave. So very interesting, what you’re building there.

Pieter, I’m conscious of the time. This is pretty much the end of my slot with you. This has been such a cool discussion.

I guess just last thing, two minutes to just leave people with, an elevator pitch: why should anyone invest in Shoprite? And I think just to couch that, specifically for the long term, because I think this really is the type of investment that you buy and forget. There are not many of them, and this is one of them.

So, the two-minute elevator pitch: why should an investor really feel good about their money being in Shoprite?

Pieter Engelbrecht: I hope I’m not going to go over the time limit you’ve given me, but you know, I want to start with the story that I visited an investor, a very, very large fund in Boston in America.

I met the CEO. They gave us some sandwiches for lunch, and he came in and he said to me, “Hello Pieter, let me just explain to you where you fit in my world. We are an over trillion-dollar fund.

Okay – I can’t even count to that.  They said, “I think it will take you 36 years if you had to count to a trillion, if you count every second.”

36 years. I don’t have 36 left!

He says to me, “Out of this trillion dollars, 3% of our portfolio is in EMEA (you know Middle-East, Africa etc.) and in there is South Africa, and in South Africa is Shoprite. So you’re actually nothing in my life. “

I said, “Thank you for the lunch, I really appreciate that, it’s all good, I’ll go back home now.”

He said, “No, I’ll tell you one thing – the only share that I own in South Africa is Shoprite.” I said to him, “Why? Have you been to South Africa?” He says “No, but I can read.” 

That’s where the saying of mine has came from, is actually that man. He said to me, for him, “Shoprite is not a retailer that sells stuff. It’s an institution.”

That is the message that I actually want to give. 

Shoprite is not a cheap share. It’s like Warren Buffett said. If you buy a good share, you’re going to pay for it. If you want to speculate the market, then Shoprite is probably not your share to buy. 

But what is that Shoprite offers? Stability, consistency, the brand equity by itself. It’s not for nothing that it’s the number one brand in South Africa.

And afterwards I asked myself, “Pieter, can you imagine South Africa without Shoprite?” Think about the suppliers, the farmers, that whole value chain – it’s not possible!

And that’s why I say Shoprite is a good investment.

The Finance Ghost: I think that gets the message across pretty well. It’s not my time limit, I could speak to you all day, but there are members of your team there who will come and hit me on the head if I use more than my slot. Because you are a man in demand, everyone wants to speak to you today, and understandably so. So, we are going to have to leave it there.

Pieter from my side, and to the team on that side, just a big congrats. It’s really fun to write about Shoprite, I get a big kick from it strategically, I get to see lots of similarities to what other retailers are doing overseas – like the best in the world, kind of retailers. So well done, congrats. 

I hope this will only be our first podcast rather than our last podcast, because I’ve really enjoyed it and you’ve got so much to share. All the best for the rest of the discussions today, and certainly for the trading conditions that you’re in at the moment.

Thank you so much.

Pieter Engelbrecht: You’re very welcome and I thank you very much, also for your time. We appreciate that.

PODCAST: No Ordinary Wednesday Ep122 | A new cycle for private equity

Listen to the podcast here:

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Private equity is shifting gears. As rates turn and investor confidence improves, funds are deploying again, and South Africa is firmly back on the radar. But this isn’t a return to excess, it’s a shift toward smarter leverage, disciplined execution and sharper capital structuring. In the latest episode of No Ordinary Wednesday, Jeremy Maggs speaks to Rishanth Pillay, Head of Sponsor Leveraged Finance at Investec Corporate & Investment Banking, about what’s driving the renewed momentum – and what could derail it.

Hosted by seasoned broadcaster, Jeremy Maggs, the No Ordinary Wednesday podcast unpacks the latest economic, business and political news in South Africa, with an all-star cast of investment and wealth managers, economists and financial planners from Investec. Listen in every second Wednesday for an in-depth look at what’s moving markets, shaping the economy, and changing the game for your wallet and your business.

Also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and YouTube:

Ghost Bites (AfroCentric | Cashbuild | Labat Africa | Libstar | Lighthouse Properties | Quilter | Sanlam | Woolworths)

AfroCentric’s earnings are under pressure (JSE: ACT)

Will Sanlam regret this one?

AfroCentric has released numbers for the year ended December 2025. They look bonkers at first blush, with revenue nearly doubling and HEPS coming in more than 3x higher. And yet if you look at the underlying management commentary, they talk about a challenging performance.

It took me a while to see why this is the case, but then I noticed that the comparable period is the six months ended December 2024. It’s therefore little wonder that 12-month numbers look so much bigger than 6-month numbers.

Having solved that mystery, it makes a lot more sense to look at the commentary and see them talking about a tough period. Revenue for the year was significantly lower than in the 12 months to June 2024 (the last 12-month period we have), with operating profit down considerably as well. Even cash generated from operations is lower than what we saw in that period. For me, it’s less about the percentages in this case, as we would be comparing to an old period. The more important point is that the direction of travel has been down.

One of the challenges has been the loss of important contracts. There’s much hope that the new relationship with Sanlam (JSE: SLM) as the controlling shareholder will help them turn the corner, but these things aren’t easy to implement.

AfroCentric notes that Fedhealth and Medshield won’t be amalgamating for actuarial reasons, showing how difficult it is to actually achieve scale in this space. This means that multi-scheme services are the way forward, while looking for ways to tap into the Sanlam ecosystem to find new product opportunities.

It also doesn’t help that Medscheme is fighting with Bonitas over the latter’s approach to finding a new services provider. When you have to go to court to try to retain your customers, you’re running a tough business.

Once you strip out the impairments and all the noise, you’re looking at a company that generated R117 million in headline earnings, or 13.92 cents in HEPS. The share price is just over the R1 mark. The low-single-digit Price/Earnings multiple reflects the complexity here, as well as the underlying risk with client contracts. And when you’re in the sub-R1 billion market cap category, results that are difficult to understand and interpret make things even harder.

At least going forward, the change in year-end is out of the system. This removes some of the compexity.

With Sanlam having acquired its controlling stake at much higher prices than the current AfroCentric share price, one wonders if the feelings of regret are kicking in.


Cashbuild’s margins look much better (JSE: CSB)

This is far more positive than sales growth suggested would be the case

Cashbuild has released results for the six months to 28 December 2025. I wasn’t expecting much, as the revenue updates have been timid. But there’s a positive surprise in these numbers for investors like me, as Cashbuild has managed to extract much better margins in a slow-growth environment.

Revenue increased 3%, with volumes doing almost all of the heavy lifting. With limited selling price inflation, it’s even more surprising that gross profit margin actually improved from 24.3% to 25.0%. This drove a 7% increase in gross profit.

With only a 6% increase in operating expenses (excluding the loss on disposal of the Malawi operation, a number that is excluded from HEPS anyway), the company pulled off an improvement in operating margin. By the time you get to HEPS, you find an increase of 18%.

Not convinced by this? Well, you could always follow the cash. With the dividend up 21%, Cashbuild is sending a far more bullish message than before. The market is listening, with the share price closing 4.5% higher on the day.

The revenue for the first 7 weeks of the new reporting period looks good, up 8% year-on-year. Will the share price keep clawing its way up based on these numbers?

Give me your thoughts in the poll below:

206
Cashbuild, Italtile, or neither?

Pick your fighter in the building materials space:


Labat Africa is acquiring a 20% take in a Mozambican AI business (JSE: LAB)

No, you aren’t hallucinating

Mozambique is known for many things. Beautiful beaches, R&R, rubies, civil unrest – but not AI. I have never in my life read anything about the technology sector in that country. There’s a first time for everything!

Labat Africa has announced the acquisition of a 20% interest in Mondau, LDA – a private company in Mozambique that is focused on generative AI and related products across Africa. Their specific expertise is in industrial AI applications.

This is part of Labat’s broader strategy to get closer to the AI-secured dollar cashless transactions market in sub-Saharan Africa. What does that have to do with industrial AI, you ask? I’m also not sure.

It gets even more fascinating when you see the pricing. Labat will acquire a 20% stake for R30 million, a price that is in line with the net asset value of R150 million. This is for a business that delivered pre-tax profit of $5 million (yes, around R80 million) in the 2025 financial year. The tax rate in Mozambique is 32%.

This means they are paying a single-digit Price/Earnings multiple for what is supposedly an AI company. One thing about Labat: it’s never boring.


Libstar goes on the charm offensive (JSE: LBR)

Life-after-cautionary includes a Capital Markets Day this month

Libstar has been on quite the rollercoaster ride. After trading under cautionary based on negotiations with potential acquirers, the company withdrew that cautionary based on their belief that the negotiations were undervaluing Libstar’s business.

We’ve seen this movie before on the local market. The new-defunct Murray & Roberts is surely the worst example, with the board snubbing an offer and the company heading into business rescue just a few years later. To be clear, that isn’t the trajectory that Libstar is on – the Murray & Roberts example is of the extreme variety. But the lesson for shareholders is that boards don’t always have the right view on the fair value of a company.

I’ll give credit to Libstar here: they are going to explain their view to the market. They’ve scheduled a Capital Markets Day for 31 March in Cape Town, with a site visit on 1 April. There’s also a link to join online for the presentations, should you so desire.

The recent performance has certainly been on the up, so it’s going to be interesting to understand the investment case from the board’s perspective.

Libstar’s share price is hanging in there for the time being, up 21% over 12 months and maintaining at least a portion of the gains that were triggered by the initial cautionary announcement. The management team is smart enough to realise that they need to do the work to keep it there.


Lighthouse’s earnings grow by 7.5% (JSE: LTE)

And that’s measured in euros

Lighthouse Properties released results for the year ended December 2025. This property fund is focused on western European cities, so the earnings are in euros.

Lighthouse has been pushing hard into Iberia, although there’s now too much money chasing too few deals in that market. Both Lighthouse and sector peer Vukile Property Fund (JSE: VKE) have flagged that the window for dealmaking is closing in Spain and Portugal. Capital discipline is key in this game, so it’s good to see this kind of commentary.

Shareholders won’t complain about Lighthouse’s 7.5% uplift in both distributable earnings per share and the distribution itself. The goal in property investing is to achieve a decent premium to inflation. Considering that this is a hard currency return, Lighthouse has achieved that goal.

The loan-to-value ratio has moved significantly higher, up from 25% to 35.5%. They’ve been very busy with acquisitions, but they expect the pace to slow down now. Near-term growth will instead be driven by redevelopments of existing properties. I must also note that 35.5% isn’t an unhealthy balance sheet.

The board is forecasting growth of 6.9% in FY26. If they get it right, that’s another decent year of returns for investors.


Quilter is managing to extract growth from the tough UK market (JSE: QLT)

The platform strategy is working

Quilter has released results for the year ended December 2025. With total assets under management and administration up by 18% year-on-year, their strategy to attract assets is working. Sure, market values helped the cause here, but they still achieved record flows – and that’s what management should really be measured on.

Revenue wasn’t quite as exciting unfortunately, up only 5% based mainly on management fee revenue. They managed to keep cost increases to just 4% though, so adjusted profit before tax was up 6%.

Adjusted diluted earnings per share increased 4%, impacted by a higher tax rate for the group. The dividend for the year increased by 7%. Shareholders can also look forward to a share buyback programme of £100 million this year.

Looking deeper, Quilter Advisor productivity (measured by channel sales per advisor) increased by 6%. The IFA channel was the biggest highlight though, with gross flows up by a whopping 40%.

The disappointment was in the high net-worth segment, where gross flows were slightly down. The UK government is doing an incredible job of chasing rich people away to other countries.


Sanlam to invest R3.2 billion in African Rainbow Capital Investments (JSE: SLM)

At least there’s a proper hurdle rate here for performance fees

Sanlam never sits still. I’ve said before that if you’re going to work in an internal corporate finance and strategy team, this is a company that should be at the top of your list. There’s always a deal on the table in Bellville.

The latest example is Sanlam Life acquiring a 25% economic interest in the diversified investments portfolio of the ARC Fund. This excludes the financial services investments in ARC. You basically need a full safari guide to navigate the ARC group structure and where everything sits.

Sanlam and ARC have a deeply entrenched relationship, not least of all because they share Ubuntu-Botho Investments as an empowerment partner. Sanlam Life has identified this as a way to increase their alternative asset exposure through a vehicle that they are familiar with.

For ARC, this brings them another R3.2 billion for investments, as Sanlam Life will be subscribing for new shares.

It’s amazing how the performance fees for this investment only apply if the general partner at ARC beats a hurdle rate of 23% per annum. When the broader ARC structure was listed on the JSE, the hurdle rate was a whole lot lower than that. This is the difference between negotiating with institutional investors vs. bringing something to the broader retail market.


Double-digit dividend growth at Woolworths (JSE: WHL)

But the rest of the numbers aren’t quite as exciting

Woolworths has released results for the 26 weeks to 28 December 2025. The retail market is extremely tough at the moment, but they are doing a decent job of taking the fight to major competitors in South Africa.

Group numbers include Australia, so they are usually not a reflection of how the underlying South African businesses are performing. As a brief summary, group revenue was up 5.4%, adjusted EBITDA increased 3.2% and HEPS was up 9.6%. The interim dividend is a juicy 10.3% higher. It’s worth noting that adjusted diluted HEPS was only 0.7% higher.

I prefer to look at the underlying segments to get a feel for performance. So, let’s go shopping.

At Woolworths South Africa, for example, turnover growth was 6.8%. A feature of these numbers is that both major underlying businesses were strong contributors.

In Woolworths Food, purveyors of the finest baby potato roasting kits (with garlic aioli and crispy onions), turnover was up 7.0% overall and 5.2% on a comparable store basis. This is the only grocery retailer in South Africa that is keeping Shoprite (JSE: SHP) on their toes in the premium segment. Woolworths continues to enjoy premium pricing power, with price movement of 4.6% at a time when Shoprite had almost no inflation at all.

Woolies Dash grew revenue by 23%, with that channel contributing 7.2% to Woolworths Food sales in South Africa. The omnichannel strategy requires more stores in order to be a success, with net trading space up 4.3%. They talk about the dilutionary impact of online sales though, contributing to a 10 basis points decline in gross margin to 24.8%.

Adjusted EBITDA was up by 7% in Woolworths Food, so we can put a tick in the box for this part of the business. And I strongly recommend that you try those potatoes.

Onwards to Fashion, Beauty and Home (FBH) – the part of the business that has been a lot shakier than Food. Things are looking much better now, with turnover up 6.2% overall and 6.4% on a comparable-store basis. Unlike in Woolworths Food, they are reducing their footprint here – net trading space was down by 1.9%. Being right around the corner from your customers is less important in clothing than in food.

Online contributed 6.2% to sales, which is less than in Woolworths Food these days. This just shows you how consumer habits have changed in recent years.

Price movement was 2.8% over the period, but this wasn’t enough to protect gross margin, which fell by 50 basis points to 45.8%.

Despite this, adjusted operating profit was up 1% and adjusted EBITDA increased 4.5%. They aren’t shooting the lights out, but that’s still a decent result in a very tough environment.

The other thing we have to focus on is Country Road Group, where sales were up by 2.3% overall and 2.5% on a comparable-store basis. Net trading space crept 0.2% higher, while the online contribution was unchanged at 27.2%.

Gross profit margin at Country Road Group didn’t fare so well though, down 100 basis points to 57.9%. Expenses were kept flat thanks to restructuring activities, so adjusted operating profit increased by 4.2%. By Aussie retail standards, that’s a very good result!

The Woolworths share price is down 2.5% over 12 months, which sounds horrible without context. But do yourself a favour and compare it to the other local retailers. You’ll quickly see that Woolworths has been one of the most resilient names in the sector, avoiding the absolute bloodbath further down the LSM curve.


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • AngloGold Ashanti (JSE: ANG) was a tad sneaky in a director dealings announcement, noting that a sale worth $525k was “in part to fund the tax liability” on a share-based award. Technically, that’s true, but someone skimming the announcement might think that only the taxable portion was sold. In reality, this particular director sold the entire award that vested.
  • Having gone through the embarrassing process of significantly restating prior period earnings, South Ocean Holdings (JSE: SOH) has now followed it up with a trading statement that notes an expected drop in HEPS of 69.8%. They are essentially giving you the answer here, rather than a range, with HEPS coming in at 6.81 cents for the year ended December 2025. Let’s hope they are right this time about what the HEPS number should be.
  • One of the things you don’t want as a listed company is to get a reputation for using SENS as a PR machine. SENS announcements should be used sparingly for anything that isn’t mandatory under the listings requirements (like results, or director dealings). Bell Equipment (JSE: BEL) hopefully won’t make a habit of releasing announcements like their latest one. They’ve noted a new collaboration agreement to supply CASE Construction Equipment motor graders to CNH for distribution in North America. The announcement is devoid of any financial information, with the only data point being that the first motor graders will be supplied in the second half of 2026. My view is that unless a company is willing to give an indication of financial effects, the announcement probably doesn’t belong on SENS.
  • It probably won’t come as a surprise to you that the non-binding advisory vote on SPAR’s (JSE: SPP) remuneration policy was on the embarrassing side. A whopping 69.54% of votes were cast against it. Sadly, this is where “non-binding” becomes important – it’s little more than a form of protest.
  • The RMB Holdings (JSE: RMH) AGM also dished up some spicy results, although that’s to be expected when there is so much animosity between shareholders with conflicting views. Certain director appointments were not approved, while the remuneration policy suffered 86.76% of votes cast against it.
  • Nombulelo Pinky Moholi, ex-CEO of Telkom (JSE: TKG), has joined the board of Netcare (JSE: NTC) as an independent non-executive director.
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