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Ghost Stories #89: 25 years of Satrix – how indexation changed investing in South Africa

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In the year 2000, a lot happened. There was some questionable pop music. There was also the Dot-Com Crisis, followed by a period that saw incredible equity returns in South Africa until the Global Financial Crisis hit in 2007/2008. And during that important period in our local market, we also saw the emergence and initial growth of ETFs in South Africa, spearheaded by Satrix.

To reflect on 25 years of ETFs in South Africa, René Basson joined me to share the important milestones and fascinating stories that defined this journey. In doing so, it became clear just how much has changed in South Africa to make investing accessible to everyone.

Join us as we look back on how Satrix made it possible for everyone to own the market.

This podcast was first published here.

Disclaimer:

Satrix Investments (Pty) Ltd & Satrix Managers (RF) (Pty) Ltd is an authorised financial services provider. The information does not constitute advice as contemplated in FAIS. Use or rely on this information at your own risk. Consult your Financial Adviser before making an investment decision. While every effort has been made to ensure the reasonableness and accuracy of the information contained in this document (“the information”), the FSP’s, its shareholders, subsidiaries, clients, agents, officers and employees do not make any representations or warranties regarding the accuracy or suitability of the information and shall not be held responsible and disclaims all liability for any loss, liability and damage whatsoever suffered as a result of or which may be attributable, directly or indirectly, to any use of or reliance upon the information. For more information, visit https://satrix.co.za/products

Full Transcript:

The Finance Ghost: Welcome to this episode of the Ghost Stories podcast. This is the last one for 2025 with the team from Satrix, and as has become somewhat of a tradition, we end off with René Basson. She is the Head of Brand and Marketing at Satrix. 

It takes me about a year to convince her to actually emerge from the cave of marketing and come and speak on this podcast, and I’m always so glad when she does because we get a completely different lens on what’s happening at Satrix and all the excitement there. 

And of course, we’re doing this in the year in which Satrix has turned 25. So, congratulations, René, to everyone at Satrix. Hopefully, there was a nice big birthday party and some cake.

René Basson: There was! Hi Ghost, thanks for having me, and I’m glad to have come out of the cave. It was a great party. We had it two weeks ago, on the 27th of November.

The Finance Ghost: Very nice. Were there 25 candles? Or is that how Satrix saves money and keeps the fees nice and low on these funds, and you only had a few candles to represent 25?

René Basson: We had two big lights, a two and a five. So, you know…

The Finance Ghost: There we go. 

René Basson: …No candles.

The Finance Ghost: So yes, the short answer is yes. Very nice. [laughing]

René Basson: Yes.

The Finance Ghost: It’s great to be able to do this with you, and we will be chatting through the history of Satrix. I mean, it’s an obvious thing to do in such a big birthday milestone year. 

And I think it’s a great thing to do, because people forget just how important Satrix has been to changing the way that South Africans can invest. Well, I’m not sure if they forget, but they certainly don’t always realise the role that Satrix has really played here. 

So, let’s start at the beginning, which seems like a good place to start. That is all the way back in January 2000 – dot-com crash, top of an equity cycle. I spoke to Kingsley a few podcasts ago, and he was explaining what it was like to be working during the dot-com crash. 

Not to make anyone feel old, but I was finishing primary school at that time. So, ETFs were not top of mind for me, I’ve got to tell you. But it was also roughly around that time that we saw the start of a bull market in South Africa, something I’ve not really experienced in my professional career until this year, actually. 

And that bull market would last all the way until the global financial crisis, when Wall Street kind of ruined the party. This represented the era in which Satrix got off the ground and did a lot of stuff, which we’ll dig into shortly. 

But let’s start in 2000. What was the backstory here on the launch of Satrix? Such an important moment for the South African investment landscape.

René Basson: It certainly was. Many people might think our story started on the 27th of November 2000, but in fact, it was early 2000 in January when our first institutional mandate of R800 million was awarded. The client was mCubed, our first institutional client.

So, our former CEO, Helena Conradie, spoke at this event that we had two weeks ago, and she said something that really resonated with me. She said, “Sometimes we forget that the world we now take for granted was once held together by courage and duct tape.” 

And I thought that was a really nice way to put it. Because if you think about passive investing or indexation, it was largely unknown back then. The industry didn’t exist. We didn’t have the vocab yet.

So, establishing this capability for Satrix really required the collective effort of a group of (I suppose you could call them) visionary supporters, who recognised the potential of indexation strategies long before this industry even took shape. So, this group of people really took a calculated risk to lay the groundwork of a market that didn’t exist yet.

So, if you move forward from Jan 2000 to just 11 months later, in November, a joint venture between the JSE, Gensec Bank (which was Sanlam Investments’ team back then or Gensec Asset Management), and Corpcapital resulted in the listing of South Africa’s very first Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) on the 27th of November 2000. And that was the Satrix Top 40 ETF.

It was a R2.6 billion IPO, and it kind of marked the first formal emergence of this new era of investing in South Africa. Another really interesting thing that Helena mentioned during the speech was that Satrix, which is currently the dominant indexation player in South Africa, was born inside an active house.

And what this really shows is that the investment ecosystem really collaborated to do something brand new. It was the JSE, Deutsche Bank, Corpcapital, Gensec Bank – it was really phenomenal and really shows how everyone came together to develop a new industry. It’s really exciting.

You’re probably wondering about the name – Satrix. The name was decided upon in a meeting of key players. Obviously, a lot of meetings were happening back then. 

The story goes that Mike Brown and the team were chatting about names. They were throwing around names like ‘Trax’, ‘A-trax’, ‘B-trax’, ‘Matrix’. Then he said, “What about South African Index Trackers – Satrix?” And it stuck.

So, if you think about that, it’s quite interesting, because there was no creative agency, no strategy consultants involved. It was just this name that stuck, and it’s been synonymous with indexation since then.

Another couple of interesting facts. In 2009, Satrix was jointly owned by Deutsche Bank and Sanlam in a 50/50 partnership, and in 2012, Sanlam bought the Deutsche stake in Satrix. So, apparently, neither Sanlam nor Deutsche Bank wanted to let Satrix go. 

They ultimately agreed to do a Texas Auction, where both parties had to write down the price of what they were willing to pay for the other 50%. Both envelopes were opened at exactly the same time, and the highest bid bought the other 50% out. 

There were no negotiations, and we both know who ended up and what the outcome was with that. That was the start.

The Finance Ghost: Fantastic! What a great story. I love the ‘courage and duct tape’. That reminds me of my first year of racing at Killarney when I raced two-stroke karts. I started in the Clubman’s series, which is basically where very old and sad karts go to die. It’s like their last hurrah. 

You pick them up cheap, and there’s a very good reason for that. I promise you, ‘courage and duct tape’ is quite literally what was holding those things together, more than once. So, that’s a great analogy. I love it.

And also, great point around the name. I think a lot of great startups are named by the founder because they started on a shoestring budget. They don’t have a whole committee of people coming up with a name. And what a good name it is. Uniquely South African. So, I love that.

Let’s go back to that first listing, then, JSE Top 40. I think you said R2.6 billion. Still a big number, especially for 2000. That’s not a small number. Obviously, dwarfed by what we have today in the fund (I’m not sure how big the fund is actually, I’d love you to confirm that), but is that the biggest ETF? 

And do you think it’s the product that Satrix is still best known for? Or has the product range gotten so broad now that it’s really the Satrix name that everyone knows, as opposed to Satrix Top 40, like it was all those years ago?

René Basson: It’s an interesting question. I think, possibly yes. It’s probably what we’re most closely associated with. So, it’s certainly our flagship product, and I’d say possibly considered the default when people are asked to think about a South African ETF. 

It is our biggest local ETF. The market cap is approximately R20 billion. And then, it’s in the top three. The other two in the top three are the MSCI World Unit Trust and the ETF as well.

The Finance Ghost: Of course, the market cap is a bit bigger now than it was a year ago, because what a year it’s been for the JSE Top 40. Gold stocks have been doing the most, and some other big contributions as well, coming through from the likes of Prosus. So, it’s been a really fantastic year. 

I wasn’t joking when I said that this has really been the first time that I’ve truly experienced a bull market in South Africa, where you just see that steady improvement in sentiment coming through, and coming through. I think 2026 is going to get very interesting. Hopefully, nothing goes wrong (touch wood).

Let’s go back to 2006. This was now my matric year, and I was starting to figure out what to study. I actually remember when the news came out about the Satrix Investment Plan. This was very interesting to me because suddenly, it made the market so much more accessible. 

And when I went to university and I started with my typical student jobs (which means a combination of some restaurant stuff, and in my case, some tennis coaching as well, which was great), some of that extra money every month could go into a Satrix Investment Plan, even though it was a modest amount every month. I started nice and early, and just a cool product, really.

And this was a big step because it opened products up to retail ownership, just like for me as a student with the small amount that I could put away each month. And it encourages people to invest regularly, which is so important in that wealth-creation journey. 

So, let’s hear about the Satrix Investment Plan. It’s now what, roughly 19 years old? So, almost two decades of that thing. What has the investor behaviour been in this plan? How successful has it actually been?

René Basson: Yeah, Ghost, I wish I’d heard about the Satrix Investment Plan back then. I was actually overseas at that point – I’m a little bit older than you, so I was working already.

The plan launched in 2006. It allowed retail investors to invest in the JSE-listed assets for the first time, for, as you said, R300 or, I think it was R1,000 lump sum. This was a significant reduction in the minimum investment requirements at the time, when I think brokerage was around R100 per transaction. 

So, it made it really easy for South Africans to start investing. It was a pretty disruptive time, I think you’ve mentioned that. And it was probably considered the precursor to SatrixNOW, which launched nine years later in 2015, in partnership with EasyEquities.

So, in terms of investor behaviour, I think it introduced this monthly, direct debit type of approach to investing, which was quite significant. It created this outlook of consistency, good habit-forming behaviour – something that we at Satrix try to encourage a lot of, still to this day. 

And it also reduced the amount that was needed, which was a really big step. Back then, investing was around lump sums. Only wealthy people could do it, because you needed a large amount of cash to invest.

So, I think it opened up the landscape for a new type of investor – who didn’t necessarily want to work via a stockbroker – and made it more accessible. I think there was a significant increase in retail investment participation back then, and it’s been a steady growth. 

The Investment Plan has kind of been folded into SatrixNOW, so the platform has been growing steadily. There’s momentum behind it, almost in line with the indexation industry itself.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, people forget, right? Because today, we’re so spoiled. You can go and invest, literally your lunch money (and we’ll get to that), in basically anything you like on the market, now that there’s fractional investing. 

Certainly was not the case at that time. So…

René Basson: It definitely wasn’t.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, no, it wasn’t at all. It was a proper game changer to be able to set up a debit order of a few hundred bucks a month. And R300 back then was a number. So, the South African economy was doing better. So, in some respects it was a number, in some respects it wasn’t. But obviously, inflation tells us that that R300 would have been a lot more today.

We’re so spoiled now. You can go and invest literally R50 a month today, if that’s all you can do. Whereas back then, you needed R300 a month, and that was revolutionary. So, just shows where we’ve come from.

Then in 2013, which is now just over a decade ago, that was the first global product. Incredible timing because it basically exactly caught the start of the tech wave. I think the Facebook IPO was probably around that time, and that just dominated the narrative since then, it really has. 

So, you had the global financial crisis, then you had the banks getting highly regulated, and people started to look for, “Okay, well, what’s the next source of growth?” (because obviously it’s not Wall Street). And it was tech, and it was software as a service (SaaS). That was built up over that sort of time. That’s how the world changed.

Microsoft was not always an amazing business. It really became one in the past decade. It became way more lucrative. Companies like Adobe went and revolutionised the way people think about software. Now, of course, Adobe is getting really hurt by AI, so the good times come and they go.

But it was fantastic timing for Satrix to actually have this global product. So, today, or maybe if you go back a year or two, everyone was just talking about offshore. 

Obviously, over the last year, the JSE has gotten a lot of attention. But at that stage, and just thinking where we were as a country politically last decade, lots and lots of investors were throwing money at management teams to take money offshore and get some action there.

So, did you see that kind of adoption in these global products straight away? Did people jump at it because they were so keen to get that exposure? Or did it actually take a while for that to actually take off? 

And then also, what was that product journey? Because I don’t think the first product was an ETF, was it?

René Basson: No, it wasn’t. So, the first global product that we introduced was an offshore unit trust, the Satrix MSCI World Equity Index Fund. The ETF equivalent only came later in 2017, when we listed the international ETFs locally. 

So, it was definitely timeous given the equity boom at the time, local sentiment deteriorating, making offshore exposure really attractive, and it served as an initial offshore access point before global ETFs were introduced.

At the time in 2013, the SARB did not allow for CISs to offer offshore listed ETFs back then, which is why we chose to do the unit trust. I think at the time, Deutsche Bank had a product under db Xtrackers.

I guess from a Satrix perspective, this launch caught the beginning of that tech wave, as you mentioned. So, it was really strategically well positioned in response to the appetite of investors back then. And anecdotally, the interest was really strong. 

Adoption-wise, if you think back to 2013, this was still an index tracking product, and moving from active to passive is a mindset change. You know, from a personal perspective, I kind of feel like that mindset change has only really taken off in the last year and a half, surprisingly.

And back in 2013, retail investors would still, even now, probably need a significant amount of education around product and index tracking itself. And then, being a unit trust, it would have still needed the traditional distribution channels. 

So, I’d say the momentum behind this product was probably gradual, and it built up over time. I can’t quantify it, but if you consider this is now one of our top three flagship funds, you can draw the conclusion that it was and still is a very popular product.

In terms of local versus global in terms of our AUM (Assets Under Management), from an ETF perspective, global is bigger. And from a unit trust perspective, local is a lot bigger from an AUM perspective, which is quite interesting.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, that is quite interesting. And we’ll have to see what the next 10 years hold, of course, because lots of uncertainty over what’s going to happen with AI. Is it a big bubble? Although, as I learned on the last podcast with Nico, he doesn’t like that term. But is it a big bubble? (Sorry, Nico.) Or is it actually going to just keep pushing through? It’s going to be super interesting to see what happens. 

And that’s the benefit of diversification, and that’s why it’s so important that Satrix has all these different products in the product suite. Because you can go and get this diversification, local, offshore, sector, whatever else you want, basically, using ETFs – which is great.

And now, of course, there’s a way that you can do it that is even easier. Because in 2015 (and this was a really big one for investors in South Africa, this is now a decade ago), you implemented the partnership with EasyEquities. 

And again, EasyEquities, when they started, people were not sure. I remember when they came out, there was this overarching distrust. How is this possible? How can I buy a piece of a share? How can the brokerage be this low? So, kudos to what they’ve built over the past decade. Fantastic.

And I’m guessing for the likes of Satrix, through that partnership, that’s been a huge win for you guys as well. Because obviously, it just makes it so much easier for people to go and allocate to a Satrix ETF as part of their broader portfolio, right?

René Basson: Yeah, definitely. So, the partnership with EasyEquities started in 2015 for Satrix. And the story goes that our former CEO, Helena, saw a tweet from Charles, and the rest is history, as they say.

You could definitely say this ushered in a new era of digital investing, with the minimums reduced to zero and this fully digitised interface that EasyEquities had developed. And this innovation and collaboration was recognised. We won multiple FinTech Awards for the platform in partnership with Easy as well. So, really exciting times.

EasyEquities started in 2014, and I also actually remember it. I got a R50 voucher back then, and I obviously had no clue what this was. I was also very sceptical about it. But they had patented that fractionalisation of share rights, which meant that they could solve for two challenges that our business had at the time: the investment minimums and then the access – how do we give more people access to the market?

So, in May 2015, this tweet was discovered. I think Helena had come across it. The Satrix team really liked how EasyEquities presented themselves. They aligned very much in terms of our vision, values, philosophy. 

The teams apparently met each other in June 2015. Development of the platform SatrixNOW started in August, and SatrixNOW launched in December 2015. So, if you look at this timeline, from a fintech perspective, this is really incredible. It’s very accelerated. 

We launched the app for SatrixNOW in 2020. And I guess from an adoption point of view, if you look again, I mentioned the industry has taken its time. It’s been building momentum over time. The platform has been the same for us – the momentum has built slowly. It’s been steady growth. 

We now have over 100,000 investors – active investors. So, we look at it specifically from active versus registered clients. The average age of a SatrixNOW investor is 38. And in terms of gender split, when we launched in 2015, it was 64% male investors, and now we’re sitting at 53% male investors. So, we’re really excited that we’ve been able to encourage more female investors over the years.

I think the average NAV is currently around R180,000, and the majority of our registrations for the platform come from referrals and digital channels. From a marketing perspective, it’s a great stat and a great source of information that helps us develop our marketing strategy as well. 

So, yeah, the partnership with Easy has been fantastic. We work with them very closely on a daily basis, and it’s really transformed how Satrix was able to bring our products to market.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, I love that. I love the fact that it was a R50 voucher because again, if we just go back to 2006 with the Satrix Investment Plan, the minimum debit order all the way back in 2006 was R300. And then you were getting a R50 voucher to go buy shares. It was so mind-blowing.

Again, people who have only started investing in this kind of pandemic and post-pandemic era don’t understand how weird it was to know that you could take your lunch money and invest it in shares instead. And that was some of the marketing at the time, if I recall correctly – that kind of thing. It was really amazing. I was working in corporate finance at the time, and I remember just how fascinating it was for us to see this thing play out. So, very, very cool.

If we then go forward a few years, 2019, you hit R100 billion AUM. Now you’re on almost R300 billion* AUM. So, it really has been quite a journey. 

And as far as I know, there was even a Harvard case study along the way, around the time of the start of the pandemic. How did that come about? That must have been pretty interesting, right?

René Basson: Very, very interesting. And this kind of global recognition of the strategy of the business is really quite something to be very proud of. How it came about, I’m not actually quite sure. 

I do think Helena and the team, the ExCo back then, obviously had some connection or were working with the team at Harvard.

The Finance Ghost: Maybe they saw a tweet. That’s how it all happens. Someone tweets something, and then partnerships are made.

René Basson: Exactly. This is really how the world works, right? And the case study was titled Satrix: Competing in the Passive Asset Management Industry in South Africa. It was published in 2020, and it focused on the strategic decisions that Satrix took around fee leadership and market positioning. 

And there was a big focus on the 2017 fee cut of the flagship Top 40. And, my understanding is that there were four key ‘teaching’ angles that the case study looked at. So, they looked at the pricing strategy in passive markets – so, that fee cut on the Top 40 (we cut it from 38 bps to 10 bps in 2017), how the business framed that from a market leadership and brand promise point of view.

Then they looked at the competition and consumer perception around the fee cut and price elasticity – brand positioning, long-term commitment to low-cost investing. Then they also touched on the distribution and inclusion part, so the role of SatrixNOW and the partnerships with EasyEquities, for example. 

Also touched on the partnership at the time with BlackRock (because we launched all our feeder funds in 2017), and scaling this access and education, and linking to the brand purpose of democratising investing.

And then the final thing was the execution risk and the operational model – so, how was the business delivering low tracking error at scale and supporting growth through internal technology? 

So, it was apparently a phenomenal case study. We do have a copy somewhere. I need to haul it out, but yeah, this global recognition was quite something and really impressive.

The Finance Ghost: That is amazing. I mean, a Harvard case study is a pretty big deal. So, well done. It also shows that (and this is something I think especially this year, with everything going on geopolitically, people mustn’t forget) South Africa is on the global map. 

René Basson: Definitely!

The Finance Ghost: Much as the US may be trying to turn us into a global pariah at the moment (which they will be very unsuccessful at), we are a really important emerging market. And I think with all the positive momentum we’ve got in South Africa, we’re becoming an even more important emerging market over time.

So, it is nice to see that. I do think that 2026 is going to be a very interesting year for the local market. I really hope that a lot of the momentum will continue. 

I’m not sure that gold is going to continue the way it has been because that has been pretty wild. But I’m hoping that a lot of that love will now make its way into the mid-caps and some of the more ‘SA Inc.’ focused businesses. We’ll see what happens.

From your side, as we go into 2026, as we bring this year to a close, what do you think the brand really means to South Africans, and what could the year to come actually hold for you? 

Where do you see this thing now as you go and reflect over the holiday? If you’re going to get a holiday, because you’ve told me there are a lot of exciting things coming! So, actually, the team’s keeping you very busy. Maybe that’s the answer, René – 2026 is going to have a lot?

René Basson: 2026 is going to be very busy, but I say this every year. The whole team, we say, “Oh, it’s going to be busy,” and then the next year is even busier, and yeah. 2026, watch this space. We have a lot of stuff going on. So, I’m excited.

But I think, from a brand perspective, the Satrix brand is really, really special (and I know I’m biased because I’m Head of Brand and Marketing). Our tagline is “Own the market.” And frankly, as a marketer, I couldn’t possibly have thought of a better tagline for a business like ours, purely because it really articulates what we do in three words. Instead of buying 40 shares on the JSE to get a slice of the Top 40, you can buy one. So, you literally ‘own the market’ through one transaction. 

So, I think from a brand perspective, and what we mean to South Africans, we mean access and inclusion. We do a lot of work around education and trying to help people feel empowered – that they understand financial markets, that they understand what investing is – and getting to the crux of the basics. 

And I think a lot of people, myself included – I didn’t know about investing when I went to university. You would have thought I did, but I probably wasn’t that interested either. But I love the work that we do around the education piece, and I think having the app, with a few clicks, you can invest in an ETF. It’s phenomenal.

From a value perspective, I think we mean low cost. Indexation is, by nature, low cost, but I think we’ve taken a lot of strategic decisions over the years to cut fees dramatically, and that definitely shows that we’re doing the best we can for our investors. The Harvard case study was a global endorsement of this and the strategy.

Then there’s the element of trustworthiness. We’re a financial services provider. We’re in a highly regulated industry, which is really phenomenal. And I think South Africa, as you said, we’re on the map. We got out of the grey listing. We’ve got a lot to be proud of. 

And I think for our business, over two decades of experience, we really focus on low tracking error, a best-in-class team, and the breadth of product that we bring to the market. We’re constantly innovating, trying to do the best for our investors.

And I think finally, just to say, we’re the favourite. We’ve won a number of People’s Choice Awards, which are voted for by investors like you and me. And that’s kudos to the work that our team does, and I think it’s something to be very proud of.

I heard someone say in our 20th anniversary videos that we did, “People really can own the market because of Satrix.” And I think that’s something that we, as a business, sometimes forget to be really proud of. 

It’s been 25 years of hard work, and as I said, industry stalwarts and people who were visionary have put us in this position now, and it’s really exciting to be part of that journey.

The Finance Ghost: 25 years of owning the market. That is the story at the end of the day, and it’s been a fascinating one to watch. I really have enjoyed it. I feel like I’ve lived it for many years before my Finance Ghost initiatives and ambitions there. So, it really has been great.

René, thank you. I think that brings the year to a close in style. It’s been a big year for Satrix. There’s a lot to come in 2026. I’m really looking forward to speaking to the team about everything that’s coming. We’re going to do another year of podcasts. 

So, thank you for the ongoing support in Ghost Mail and, of course, the importance that you put on the Ghost Mail audience. I know that they get a huge amount of value from this.

And to listeners, if you’ve missed any of the Satrix podcasts this year, go back and listen to them. They are somewhat timeless in terms of the lessons that we talk about there, the investment insights, and a lot of the concepts. They’re not necessarily based on what’s going on in the world at that point in time. 

We’ve done shows ranging from investing for your kids right through to trying to assess valuations in the market and when to be scared and when to double down, and it’s really these skills that will just help you on this journey.

So, René – and to the whole team at Satrix – thank you so much for another lovely year. Can’t wait to do this again in 2026, which means René, I will do another one with you 12 months from now, when we get you out of your cave in December 2026, and we talk about what the 26th year of Satrix has included.

René Basson: I look forward to it, Ghost. Thank you so much!

The Finance Ghost: Thank you, and to all the listeners, have a fantastic December holiday, and we will see you in January.

*Source: Satrix, 30 September 2025

Satrix Investments (Pty) Ltd & Satrix Managers (RF) (Pty) Ltd is an authorised financial services provider. The information does not constitute advice as contemplated in FAIS. Use or rely on this information at your own risk. Consult your Financial Adviser before making an investment decision. While every effort has been made to ensure the reasonableness and accuracy of the information contained in this document (“the information”), the FSP’s, its shareholders, subsidiaries, clients, agents, officers and employees do not make any representations or warranties regarding the accuracy or suitability of the information and shall not be held responsible and disclaims all liability for any loss, liability and damage whatsoever suffered as a result of or which may be attributable, directly or indirectly, to any use of or reliance upon the information. For more information, visit https://satrix.co.za/products

Ghost Bites (Anglo American | ASP Isotopes | DRDGOLD | Jubilee Metals | Nedbank | Schroder European Real Estate | South32)

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They’ve committed to significant capex in Canada over the next 15 years

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All regulatory approvals have been received

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And so the wage issues in the gold sector begin, with DRDGOLD first in line (JSE: DRD)

Let’s hope that this is solved timeously

DRDGOLD has unfortunately received 48 hours’ notice from NUM and AMCU regarding strike action scheduled for Thursday 18 December at the ERGO operations. The parties have been in wage negotiations since July 2025, successfully resolving 23 of the 25 demands tabled by the unions. Unsurprisingly, the two remaining issues are linked to wages and profit share.

UASA accepted the wage offer, but NUM and AMCU aren’t happy. Ergo’s offer is a guaranteed annual increases of between 6% and 7.5% for each of the next five years, which is well above inflation. There are also profit-based incentives on offer. NUM and AMCU want 12% across guaranteed increases and expected profit shares, bringing us neatly to the memories of when the unions absolutely crushed the mining sector. You don’t even have to go too far back to find such an example. Just look at Sibanye-Stillwater (JSE: SSW) a couple of years ago.

Do you know anyone who gets a pre-baked double-digit increase per year for five years? Me neither.

Sibanye played hardball with the unions and took a lot of pain along the way. What approach will DRDGOLD take? Only time will tell. One thing we know for sure is that strike action does no favours to the local mining industry, especially when the demands are unreasonable.


Jubilee Metals has bet the farm on copper (JSE: JBL)

Is regret around the exit from PGMs starting to set in yet?

In November, Jubilee Metals announced that the Competition Tribunal had given approval for the sale of the South African chrome and PGM operations. This is a transaction that would’ve made sense when it was initially envisaged, as PGMs weren’t doing particularly well. In contrast, all the focus at the mining giants has been on copper, so a push into becoming a pure-play copper company makes Jubilee a far more obvious acquisition target.

The latter part of that thesis remains intact. The former has changed dramatically, with PGMs now flying and all indications being that the metal has a decent future as regulators realise that not everyone wants an electric vehicle. In fact, the EU has just announced that they are dropping their silly ban on internal combustion engine cars from 2025, a sensible decision in the context of how good hybrid technology has become. And hybrids, of course, still need PGMs.

The unfortunate timing of the exit from PGMs means that Jubilee’s share price has had a horrible year (down 16%) that gets even worse when you compare it to mining peers. Shareholders are understandably frustrated, although they may end up smiling down the line if Jubilee can get the copper strategy to work. Given the level of international activity we’ve seen around copper, it’s hard not to think about the potential acquirers out there.

The latest from the company is the release of results for the year ended June 2025. Chrome and PGMs were still in these numbers, with the disposal anticipated to be concluded in December. The focus is on copper as the continuing operations, with chrome and PGMs shown separately as a disposal group held for sale.

To give you a sense of what to expect in the numbers, most of the commentary around copper actually focuses on the performance in Q1 2026 i.e. the months after the June period. The company wants you to rather pay attention to the significant improvements made since June (copper production up 65% sequentially i.e. vs. Q4’25), particularly as the underlying projects have a strong development flavour to them. There are also important sales of non-core waste assets and copper bearing material that should be recognised in FY 26 for a total of $17.9 million.

As for FY25 though, copper revenue fell by 17.9% to $15.2 million due to lower copper production during a period of significant capex. The 35.4% drop in production led to an 81.1% increase in the cost per ounce to produce copper, so you won’t be surprised to learn that the company suffered a headline loss of 0.62 US cents vs. positive HEPS of 0.08 US cents in the comparable period.

Guidance for FY26 is copper sales of 4,500 – 5,100 tonnes, with rain as a major variable. Even at the low end of guidance, that’s more than double the FY25 amount of 2,211 tonnes.

Those wanting a speculative play heading into 2026 might want to dig a bit further here! It has all the makings of a “market apathy” opportunity and a potentially much better year in FY26. It’s certainly high on the risk rating though, so deep research and appropriate caution would be required.


Nedbank is out of Ecobank (JSE: NED)

Nedbank now has even less exposure to Africa – and at a time when the continent is shining brightly

Hindsight is always perfect, so take that into account as you read about Nedbank’s decision to sell Ecobank at a time when Africa is doing so well. But even in the context of trying to give the benefit of the doubt, if you just look around the JSE at the names that have done really well this year (like the telcos), then you’ll see that growth in Africa is a big part of it. With the dollar continuing to give these frontier markets a pressure release, growth is being achieved without an associated collapse in their currencies.

So yes, hindsight and all that, but banks also have a lot of clever people around the table doing forecasts. What process could possibly have led to a bearish view on Africa in this environment? Nedbank makes the point that they’ve retained exposure to East Africa and of course SADC, but it’s minor compared to what the other legacy banks in South Africa are doing on the continent in pursuit of growth in countries where the juggernaut called Capitec (JSE: CPI) isn’t eating their lunch.

Macro and strategy concerns aside, the sale of the 21.2% stake in Ecobank has been completed. Regulatory approvals were received and the deal closed on 17 December. They offloaded it for approximately R1.7 billion, a small number in the context of the group market cap of R125 billion. Other important context is that the disposal proceeds are almost 3x the Transnet settlement amount of R600 million.

Due to accounting rules and the release of previously recognised foreign exchange losses and fair value moves, this is going to cause the release of a substantial negative amount through the income statement. It won’t affect HEPS and also won’t affect the net asset value (NAV) per share as these losses were previously recognised. It’s a left-pocket-to-right-pocket thing.

Nedbank’s clearest sector peer is Absa (JSE: ABG). The underperformance of Nedbank in the second half of 2025 has been severe:


Schroder European Real Estate’s Apeldoorn problem is here (JSE: SCD)

Their very large and important tenant has given notice

As I’ve written multiple times in the past year, I struggle to understand why any investor would shun the many excellent property companies on the JSE in favour of Schroder European Real Estate. Apart from uninspiring valuation trends in the underlying properties and a significant tax overhang as well, the recent results at Schroder made it clear that they are facing a huge risk at the Apeldoorn property based on a large tenant looking to exit the property.

The company has now announced that the tenant, Koninklijke KPN, has given notice. We are talking about a mixed-use office and data centre property in the Netherlands that contributes a whopping 19% of the company’s portfolio income and 6% of its value. The significant mismatch between income and value is because of the short remaining term on the lease and thus the modest value placed on the income stream. The lease termination is with effect from 31 December 2026.

This gives Schroder a year to figure out how to fill the space. It’s clearly not going to be simple, as they’ve even indicated that alternative uses like a medium-density residential development is an option.

They’ve owned this property since 2018. The unlevered total return is over 8% per annum over the 7 years. It’s now going to come down to whether they can actively manage the property and achieve a decent outcome. The management narrative is bearish, noting that the departure of the tenant is expected to negatively impact the future income profile.

The share price fell 7.5% in response to the news, which means it is down 11.5% year-to-date. That’s such a bad outcome vs. how the rest of the sector has done.


South32’s Mozal Aluminium is headed for care and maintenance (JSE: S32)

They cannot lock in an affordable electricity supply beyond March 2026

Energy costs are a huge factor in the mining industry, particularly when smelters are involved. If you’ve been following the local troubles at Merafe (JSE: MRF), then you’ll know that energy costs can push these smelters into positions where they are no longer economically viable. South32 is dealing with much the same issue at Mozal Aluminium, where they’ve been trying to negotiate a suitable energy package with the government of Mozambique, Hidroeléctrica de Cahora Bassa (HCB) and Eskom.

Alas, there’s no luck on this one. Mozal Aluminium will be placed on care and maintenance from 15 March 2026 and they haven’t procured any raw materials to operate beyond that date.

One of the problems has been a drought that put pressure on HCB’s supply. Perhaps some relief will come down the line and the parties will be able to reach an agreement.

For now though, there’s a huge impact on the employees, suppliers and other stakeholders in Mozal Aluminium. The once-off costs are expected to be $60 million and the annual care and maintenance costs are $5 million. This is the full cost, not South32’s 63.7% share. In case you’re wondering, the IDC is wearing 32.4% of the pan and the Mozambique government has 3.9%.

Production guidance up to March 2026 is unchanged. Importantly, the alumina supplied from Worsley Alumina to Mozal will be sold to third party customers instead.


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • An executive at Sirius Real Estate (JSE: SRE) sold shares worth R900k.
    • A director of Huge Group (JSE: HUG) bought shares worth R32.5k.
    • Here’s something unusual: the CEO of SPAR (JSE: SPP) has converted his unvested rights to a performance-related cash bonus into the equivalent value of SPAR ordinary shares that are committed in terms of the minimum shareholding requirements policy. The value is R3.7 million.
  • Astoria (JSE: ARA) shareholders voted in favour of the delisting of the company and the repurchase of shares from those who won’t be following the company into the unlisted space. Holders of just over 60% of shares in issue have given an irrevocable undertaking to not accept the offer. The maximum acceptance condition for the offer (i.e. those taking it) was 42.5%, so they are okay from that perspective. Those who want to accept the offer of R8.15 per share must notify their brokers before 2nd January. Astoria will be delisted on 6th January. Remember, there’s also an unbundling of Goldrush (JSE: GRSP) shares to Astoria shareholders as part of this process.
  • Famous Brands (JSE: FBR) has locked in debt funding of R1.675 billion through the process of refinancing loans with Nedbank. To give you a sense of how these things can be structured, the breakdown is as follows: R800 million in five-year term loans (half bullet and half amortising), R275 million as a one-year term loan, R500 million as a three-year revolving credit facility (with possible renewal for two further one-year periods) and R100 million as a general banking facility that is renewable annually. The funding is unsecured and on terms more favourable than the current facilities. A lot of thinking and complexity goes into these funding packages. To this day, lending packages carry the most complex legal agreements I’ve ever seen in my career!
  • ArcelorMittal (JSE: ACL) has renewed the cautionary announcement related to ongoing discussions around the Longs business that is now in care and maintenance. They are having “engagements to explore alternative solutions” for the business, with the IDC still busy with their due diligence process based on recent announcements.
  • Hulamin (JSE: HLM) has renewed the cautionary announcement that was first published in August and subsequently renewed in September and November. This relates to the potential disposal of Hulamin Extrusions. Negotiations are ongoing.
  • NEPI Rockcastle (JSE: NRP) announced the appointment of Marius Barbu as COO to succeed Marek Noetzel who will be stepping into the CEO role after serving as COO. This is an internal promotion, as Barbu is Group Asset Management Director and therefore has plenty of experience with the portfolio.
  • Trustco (JSE: TTO) has decided to suspend any further implementation of the LSH transaction. This deal goes back to January 2025 when shareholders approved the deal on the basis that there wouldn’t be a change in control of the company. The board has now suspended the implementation of the deal based on a need to assess whether the implementation would not in fact lead to a change in control.

Ghost Bites (CMH | Ethos Capital | HCI | Metair | SA Corporate Real Estate | Stefanutti Stocks | Valterra Platinum)

2

CMH repurchased almost 7.2% of shares outstanding (JSE: CMH)

It’s less than half of what they hoped for, but it’s still a good example of capital allocation discipline

CMH did a great job in 2025 of navigating a particularly difficult time in the automotive industry. It feels like the Chinese automotive dragon took a leaf out of Smaug’s book in The Hobbit and went crazy on the industry, with tons of new models and huge disruption seen in segments like affordable SUVs. Despite the pain being experienced by the legacy brands from Europe and elsewhere, CMH responded to the changes and carved out a decent market positioning.

So decent, in fact, that they felt confident to make an offer to shareholders to repurchase up to 15% of their holdings at R35.50 per share. Now, there was never really a chance of all shareholders saying yes for the full amount, but they managed to get acceptances to repurchase 7.19% of shares in issue.

This means that R191 million will be returned to shareholders. Over R172 million of that amount is being paid to directors and their associates!


Ethos Capital receives an improved offer for the residual assets (JSE: EPE)

Marketability discounts continue to hamper the use of NAV

Ethos Capital currently holds shares in Optasia (JSE: OPA) and a portfolio that they refer to as the “residual assets”. Of the total assets on the balance sheet of R1.95 billion excluding cash, the residual assets are carried at R901 million. In other words, dealing with the residual assets properly is very important to investors.

After the company received an unsolicited non-binding offer for the residual assets from RMB as the lead investor for a group of investors that will be finalised in due course, they went off and got feedback from shareholders to get an indication of support for a deal. They spoke to 82% of shareholders and got positive feedback from 70%. Interestingly, as an investment entity, they actually don’t need shareholder approval for the deal and there is no vote. They therefore canvassed support in an effort to go beyond the minimum governance requirements.

Based on the feedback and subsequent negotiations to improve the offer, the terms on the table reflect a value for the residual assets of R640 million. Your eyes aren’t deceiving you: that is indeed a 29% discount to the net asset value (NAV) on the balance sheet. Welcome to the world of marketability discounts and how useless the NAV actually is when you’re looking at a portfolio of assets. If you add on the value of the Optasia stake and the cash in the company, it works out to an implied premium of 10% to the closing price of Ethos shares on 11 December.

There are a couple of other enhancements, including an earn-out linked to the Vertice disposal (expected to be completed in April 2026) and an option for qualifying Ethos shareholders to reinvest in the company acquiring the residual assets should they wish to remain invested.

The board believes that this is the best way to monetise the residual assets, with the Optasia stake expected to be sold gradually once the six-month lock up period after the IPO has expired. They are therefore moving ahead with the deal, subject to several conditions precedent being met.


HCI sends out the circular for the property deal with SACTWU (JSE: HCI)

The HCI share price has changed so much since the initial announcement

You might recall that back in July, HCI announced that they would be offloading properties to SACTWU in a deal that is essentially a share buyback by another name. There was a subsequent announcement in September with further restructuring to try and address the impact on the B-BBEE credentials from the transaction, leading to a watering down of the deal.

There’s been one big change since those announcements: the HCI share price! Up almost 30% over 90 days, the share price is now down just 5.5% year-to-date. That’s very different context to this deal vs. where things were before.

Thankfully for HCI, the repurchase was locked in at R131 per share. That looked generous to SACTWU a few months ago, but it’s now well below the current price of R155.

HCI has released the circular to shareholders that details all the various transaction steps. Given the level of complexity involved, I was pleasantly surprised to see that the costs for the transaction are only R2.9 million!


Will Metair’s luck ever change? (JSE: MTA)

The EU has thrown the book at Rombat

There isn’t an unluckier company out there than Metair. Tracking the company’s progress is like replaying your worst Monday over and over again. If something can go wrong, it usually does.

The latest example in a long line of pain is the European Commission levying a fine of a whopping €20.2 million on Rombat for contravening EU competition law. Metair is on the hook for €11.6 million based on an assumption under EU law that the parent company exercised decisive influence over Rombat since the acquisition in 2012. Notably, the contravention of anti-trust rules was from 2004 to 2017.

The fine is payable over 51 months, although the first instalment is €4.2 million due within 3 months. Not exactly equal instalments!

Metair notes that the decisions made at Rombat that led to the fine were made well before it took over and weren’t identified in the due diligence process by external advisors. Unfortunately, this is a good example of the risks in M&A – particularly in a region with draconian regulators who are far more interested in compliance than jobs or their economy.

Naturally, Metair will assess all legal options. They also need to consider how this affects the South African debt package. This overhang was there for a long time, but I don’t think anyone expected it to be quite this bad.

The share price closed 9.3% lower on the day. It’s now down 55% year-to-date and 84% over three years. What a mess.


SA Corporate Real Estate flags at least 7% growth in the distribution per share (JSE: SAC)

But retail reversions have swung negative

The goal for REIT investors is to earn a yield and to see it grow at least in line with inflation. Chasing much higher growth rates is reserved for other equities, with property as more of a hybrid between fixed income and equity. In SA Corporate Real Estate’s pre-close update, they’ve indicated growth in the total distribution of between 4% and 5%, which means the distribution per share is expected to increase by at least 7%. That certainly does the job.

Digging into the portfolio is interesting, as this fund has some differences vs. what you’ll find elsewhere. For example, there’s a substantial residential component in the Afhco portfolio where they are expecting to sell almost 100 apartments a month.

But we begin with the retail portfolio with a focus on convenience retail. The vacancy rate has been consistent at around 2.3%. They made good progress in replacing poorly performing anchor tenancies in three malls, where Pick n Pay was replaced by Checkers in two such examples. Unfortunately, reversions in the retail portfolio swung into the red, coming in at negative 1.8% thanks to pressure from a single apparel tenant.

The industrial portfolio is fully let and has anticipated positive reversions of 3.7%, so that’s a faultless performance in that portfolio.

On the residential side, the vacancy rate is 3.7% and the anticipated residential rental increase is 3.0%. They had some negative reversions related to long-standing tenants, but things are positive overall.

In the portfolio in Zambia, the expected increase in distributable income is between 5% and 6%. They achieved positive reversions in the retail mall in that portfolio, measured in USD.

On the balance sheet, they refinanced facilities at lower margins, which means the weighted average cost of debt has come down. This is obviously very helpful for equity investors. When rates come down, the share of the underlying economics shifts from banks to equity investors (and vice versa). The loan-to-value is currently at 38.6% excluding new acquisitions, so the balance sheet is in solid shape overall. You may recall that they raised R450 million in equity through a private placement in mid-November.


Good news for the Stefanutti Stocks balance sheet (JSE: SSK)

Along with the Eskom proceeds, they’ve also closed important disposals

After a long journey to get to this point, Stefanutti Stocks has finally closed the sale of the businesses in Mozambique and Mauritius. All payments have been received, so this helps in further de-risking the balance sheet.

Along with the recent proceeds from the Eskom settlement, this has allowed the company to make a capital repayment of R550 million to Standard Bank. The outstanding amount owed on the facility has dropped sharply from R850 million to R300 million.

When risky stocks dig themselves out of a hole, it can be incredibly lucrative for the punts who took a chance. Stefanutti Stocks is up more than 200% over three years.


Valterra Platinum gets an investment grade credit rating from S&P (JSE: VAL)

This is a sign of how much better things are in the PGM sector

Valterra Platinum’s life as a separately listed company is going well at the moment, not least of all thanks to vastly improved conditions in the PGM sector. S&P has given the company an investment grade credit rating of BBB-, reflecting the rating agency’s expectation of Valterra being the top global producer of platinum and a top two global producer of PGMs.

One of the reasons given for the rating is the “moderate levels” of net debt and an expectation by S&P that the company will be in a net cash position from 2026. This informs a stable outlook, with an expectation of adjusted debt to EBITDA being below 1.5x and funds from operations being over 60% of debt for the next few years under various PGM price scenarios.

Of course, they also highlight regulatory risks in South Africa, referring to it as an “evolving regulatory environment…including empowerment-linked mining license renewals and fractious labor and community relations.” As always, the cost of borrowing for our local companies is strongly linked to how South Africa is viewed as an investment destination.

As for S&P’s views on the PGM market, they reference the slowing pace of the transition to electric vehicles, sustained growth in hybrid vehicle sales and even an improvement in jewellery demand, in some regard due to substitution of gold which is currently at a much higher price.

If you would like to read the entire S&P press release related to the rating, you’ll find it here.


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • I’m not sure what the backstory is, but a “restructuring of personal interests” has seen Simon Peile transfer Sygnia (JSE: SYG) shares worth R703 million to his wife and Sygnia CEO, Magda Wierzycka. That’s a big number!
    • Here’s another example of what generational wealth looks like: the CEO of AngloGold Ashanti (JSE: ANG) sold shares worth around R54 million. It’s been a truly insane year in the gold sector. Separately, another director sold an entire share award worth R27.7 million (even though the announcement noted that it was “in part to fund tax liability” – sure, that’s technically true, but the reality is he sold the full award).
    • A prescribed officer of Impala Platinum (JSE: IMP) sold shares worth R8 million.
    • A non-executive director of Coronation (JSE: CML) sold shares worth R5.8 million.
    • An executive director at Richemont (JSE: CFR) sold shares worth R3.8 million.
    • A2 Investment Partners bought another R1.6 million worth of shares in Nampak (JSE: NPK). Due to the board representation, it comes through as director dealings.
    • The COO of ASP Isotopes (JSE: ISO) bought shares worth roughly R940k.
    • The company secretary of Vodacom (JSE: VOD) sold shares worth R269k.
    • An independent non-executive director of Mantengu (JSE: MTU) bought shares worth R236k.
    • A director of a major subsidiary of Stefanutti Stocks (JSE: SSK) bought shares worth R188k.
    • An associate of the CEO of Grand Parade Investments (JSE: GPL) bought shares worth R183k.
    • A director of Momentum (JSE: MTM) bought shares worth R182k.
    • A director of NEPI Rockcastle (JSE: NRP) and two family members bought shares worth a total of R125k.
    • The CEO of Spear REIT (JSE: SEA) bought another R66k worth of shares for his family.
    • Here’s an unusual one: although there was no dealing in Vunani (JSE: VUN) shares, three executive directors of the company increased their holdings in Vunani due to a share buyback from a minority shareholder further up in the structure at Bambelela Capital, their investment vehicle that holds 49.2% of Vunani. I suspect that indirect holdings change pretty often on the JSE without an associated announcement like this one! Well done to them for this disclosure.
    • As you would imagine, the directors at Copper 360 (JSE: CPR) participated to a large extent in the recent capital raise that included a clawback offer and a debt conversion. The numbers aren’t a fair reflection of cash changing hands though, as significant portions were due to debt converting to equity. The announcement doesn’t give the split for each director, so I’ll rather not include the values here. The point is that the directors supported the raise.
    • Here’s another example of how property sector directors use their shares as security for loans. A director of Fortress Real Estate (JSE: FFB) has pledged shares worth R57 million as security for a loan of R25 million. This also gives you insight into the level of coverage that banks look for when using equity as security.
  • ISA Holdings (JSE: ISA) has renewed the cautionary announcement related to a non-binding expression of interest received from a party that is interested in acquiring a controlling shareholding and delisting the company. At this stage, there is no firm intention to make an offer on the table.
  • Attacq (JSE: ATT) has indicated that Peter de Villiers will be appointed as interim CFO. Raj Nana is departing with effect from 31 January 2026 and the company is unlikely to find a suitable replacement before then.
  • There’s very little liquidity in the shares of Marshall Monteagle PLC (JSE: MMP), so I’ll just mention the results for the six months to September 2025 down here in the Nibbles. Revenue from continuing operations was up 16% and total HEPS jumped spectacularly from 6.2 US cents to 22.7 US cents. Cash was down 25% as they allocated capital from cash to global equities. The interim dividend of 2 US cents is in line with the prior period despite the jump in earnings. The NAV per share increased by 9.4%.
  • Europa Metals (JSE: EUZ) is sitting on cash after selling the Toral project to Denarius Metals Corp. and then subsequently selling Denarius shares in the market. They still hold a chunk of Denarius shares and they are looking to acquire Marula Mining in a share-for-share deal. But what they can’t find is a suitable use for the cash from the Denarius shares sold thus far, so they’ve decided to rather return £1 million in capital to shareholders. That’s good discipline.
  • Salungano Group (JSE: SLG) is making some progress in catching up on its financial reporting. They’ve now released results for the six months to September 2024. Although I’m not sure how helpful such old numbers will be to shareholders until newer numbers are available, they experienced a jump in revenue from R1.6 billion to R2.2 billion and a swing in normalised EBITDA from a loss of R81 million to profit of R272 million. HEPS was 21.56 cents vs. a loss of 90 cents in the comparable period.
  • Not that anyone is going to miss this company on the market, but Sail Mining Group (JSE: SGP) is making an offer to shareholders to repurchase its shares at 7.2 cents. The shares have been suspended since July 2022. The price is a 20% premium to the last price at which it traded.
  • The attempts to revive PSV Holdings (JSE: PSV) have been going on forever, with various discussions between the liquidator and a party looking to recapitalise the company. They might be out of time, as the JSE has sent them a letter advising of the intention to proceed to terminate the listing. The JSE is clearly running out of patience here.

The plant that monopolised Christmas

A festive staple with a surprisingly cutthroat backstory, the poinsettia’s rise to Christmas royalty is tangled up with colonial meddling, corporate monopolies, and a global plant arms race. This is the unlikely tale of how a fragile Mexican shrub became one of the most powerful products in the modern holiday economy.

Every year, just after November, it emerges. In great crimson waves, it stakes its claim, conquering territory at nurseries, grocery stores, and reception desks around the country. 

Christmas is nigh, because the poinsettia has arrived.

With roughly 200 million plants sold worldwide annually and a retail haul well over the $1 billion mark, the poinsettia is, without exaggeration, one of the most commercially successful plants on Earth. Not bad for a humble Mexican shrub with a name that sounds like something you’d see a podiatrist for.

But those showy red leaves (yes, those are technically leaves, not flowers) are concealing a story absolutely heaving with geopolitics, patent wars, botanical espionage, dethroned monopolies, and a global supply chain so tangled it makes Christmas lights look organised.

So how did cuetlaxochitl – a plant once used to dye cloth and treat fevers – become the undisputed queen of Christmas décor?

A shrub with divine connections

Long before Woolies flooded their checkout displays with them, the poinsettia lived quietly in its native habitat of Southern Mexico. To the local Nahua people of the 14th century, it was less of a festive decoration and more of a practical aid; they mostly used it for dye and medicine. 

Everything changed when the Spanish arrived and, in a rare moment of colonial subtlety, didn’t rename it something horrendous like “Royal Scarlet Colonial Flower of His Majesty”.

Instead, Franciscan monks in the 1600s christened it “flor de Nochebuena” – aka “Flower of the Blessed Night”. They incorporated it into Christmas celebrations, drawn to its star-shaped leaf pattern (which they said symbolised the Star of Bethlehem) and its vivid red bracts (representing Christ’s sacrificial blood). The white variants suggested purity. Hence, the plant’s connection with Christmas, one of the most important holidays on the Christian calendar, was firmly established.

For a few centuries, the plant was a local superstar, beloved in Mexico but virtually unknown everywhere else. Then Joel Roberts Poinsett walked onto the scene like the main character and turned everything upside down. 

The diplomat who couldn’t stay out of trouble

Poinsett, a wealthy Southern Unionist, slave owner, and America’s very first diplomat to Mexico, had what you might politely call a talent for making himself unwelcome. During his tenure in the late 1820s, he managed to irritate just about everyone – partly because he tried to buy Texas (unsuccessfully), and partly because he simply couldn’t resist meddling.

But in 1828, just before Mexico finally told him to please pack his bags and go home, Poinsett visited the town of Taxco. There, he spotted flor de Nochebuena and had what can only be described as a botanical epiphany. He immediately shipped cuttings of the plant back home to the US.

A few years later, the poinsettia – now renamed after its “inventor” – made its American debut at a flower show in Philadelphia. People lost their minds. No-one had ever seen anything like it. Demand skyrocketed, and supply raced to keep up. 

There was just one problem: the early poinsettia was actually terrible at being a commercial product. It wilted after 2–3 days, it hated travel, and it dropped leaves the moment you looked at it funny. Basically, it was the houseplant equivalent of a Victorian child who took ill if the weather changed unexpectedly.

If the poinsettia was going to make it in the big leagues, it was going to need a miracle. Fortunately, it got the Ecke family.

The dynasty that turned poinsettias into Christmas royalty

In 1900, German immigrant Albert Ecke set off for Fiji to open a wellness spa, but never quite made it there. On the way, he stopped in Los Angeles, liked the sunshine, and simply… stayed. His detour would go on to change agricultural history.

Not one to sit on his hands, Ecke built a dairy, then a fruit orchard, then started selling cut flowers, including poinsettias. He therefore had his ear to the ground when the big poinsettia boom started to rumble. Wisely, Ecke diverted his attention and made poinsettias the centre of the business, earning a relatively good living as a result. 

His son, Paul Ecke, took over the family flower farm in the 1920s and had two big insights: 1) poinsettias needed better genetics and 2) the public needed better marketing. He introduced a secret grafting technique (a closely guarded method learned from an amateur gardener in Germany) that produced poinsettias with fuller shapes, more branches, sturdier stems, and longer shelf lives. In other words: consumer-proof poinsettias.

Then came the Plant Patent Act of 1930. Ecke immediately registered dozens of his unique cultivars, shutting out copycat competitors faster than you can say “intellectual property rights”. But Paul’s son, Paul Jr., took it even further. Unlike his father, he understood the power of the media. He knew that in order to get people to buy something, you needed to put it where they could see it. He flooded women’s magazines and breakfast television shows with free poinsettia samples. He (and his plants) even appeared on The Tonight Show. In doing so, he transformed the poinsettia from a plant into a seasonal identity.

By the 1990s, the Ecke empire was moving 500 000+ potted plants and more than 25 million cuttings a year. Their market share was a staggering 90%. As one journalist at the time so succinctly put it: “The Eckes of Southern California are to poinsettias what De Beers is to diamonds.”

But just like diamonds, that dominance was about to crack.

The graduate student who broke the monopoly

In 1992, a graduate student named John Dole got his hands on an Ecke cutting and did what graduate students have always done best: he tinkered. Piece by piece, experiment by experiment, he worried at the problem until the industry’s most closely guarded secret finally gave way. Dole had reverse-engineered Ecke’s top-secret grafting method – and instead of locking it back up, he published it. The effect was immediate and explosive.

Once the technique was no longer proprietary, the mystique vanished overnight. Anyone could now grow poinsettias with the same full, lush form that had defined Ecke plants for decades. Competitors rushed in, and the 1990s turned into a kind of poinsettia renaissance. Breeders pushed boundaries, colours multiplied, sizes shifted, patterns grew bolder, and varieties emerged with names that sounded less like plants and more like 80s rock bands – think Premium Picasso, Monet Twilight, and the like.

Then the big-box retailers arrived, and the tone of the industry changed again. Home Depot, Lowe’s, and Walmart recognised poinsettias as the ideal holiday loss leader: seasonal, emotional, and disposable enough to sell by the million. Prices plunged, sometimes as low as 99 cents a plant. Margins collapsed. Growers were squeezed hard, small farms disappeared, consolidation accelerated, and production steadily migrated offshore.

By 2012, even the once-invincible Ecke empire could no longer stand apart. It was sold to Dutch giant Dümmen Orange, one of the largest plant breeders in the world. An era ended. In its place, a globalised supply chain took root.

A global empire with one major omission

Today, Dümmen Orange sells roughly 60 million poinsettias a year – more than half of the global supply – which means there’s a good chance the plant sitting on a table at your local nursery traces its lineage back to them. The poinsettia may feel ubiquitous and anonymous now, but behind that familiarity sits an industrial-scale operation quietly dominating a once-fragmented market.

There’s an irony threaded through this success. While the world buys millions of poinsettias every December, the country where the plant originated, Mexico, still struggles to sell its own potted versions in the United States. A century-old soil restriction means Mexican growers are allowed to export cuttings, but not fully grown plants. As a result, Mexico earns around $12 million a year supplying the raw genetic material, while the far more lucrative potted-plant market remains firmly out of reach.

For many growers, the resentment is palpable and understandable. This is, after all, their native plant. Yet the poinsettias filling homes and shopping centres around the world are overwhelmingly patented, branded, and controlled by foreign firms, their value captured far from the soil where the species first evolved.

In Mexico, the tension has even seeped into language. “Poinsettismo” has become a slang insult, used to describe someone arrogant or intrusive. A pointed jab, especially when you remember that the plant’s global fame began with one very intrusive American diplomat.

A holiday icon, no matter the politics

For all the geopolitics, the patents and supply chains, the monopolies and student-led disruptions, the rise of Dutch mega-breeders and the slow grind of global consolidation, one thing has remained stubbornly unchanged: nothing signals Christmas quite like a poinsettia.

What began as a Nahua medicinal dye has become a billion-dollar global holiday symbol – a star-shaped burst of colour that shows up, unfailingly, every December. It’s a reminder that history rarely moves in straight lines, and that the objects we take for granted often carry stories that are stranger, messier, and far more interconnected than we imagine.

About the author: Dominique Olivier

Dominique Olivier is the founder of human.writer, where she uses her love of storytelling and ideation to help brands solve problems.

She is a weekly columnist in Ghost Mail and collaborates with The Finance Ghost on Ghost Mail Weekender, a Sunday publication designed to help you be more interesting. She now also writes a regular column for Daily Maverick.

Dominique can be reached on LinkedIn here.

The Finance Ghost Plugged in with Capitec: Ep 6 (Noodles without borders – bringing miso to Mzansi)

Introducing Market Kokoro franchisees Lu-ise Hattingh and Ruan Botha:

Lu-ise Hattingh and Ruan Botha are a great example of the power and value of travel. After spending time in Japan, they fell in love with the culture and food. As all great entrepreneurs do, they also took the opportunity to learn about the Japanese approach to consumer brands. That curiosity eventually sparked a business idea they brought back home.

Today, Lu-ise and Ruan are rolling out Market Kokoro franchise stores in South Africa and especially the Western Cape, tapping into the existing Market Kokoro infrastructure in South Africa and adding their particular flavour of experiential retail. If you love the thought of cooking your off-the-shelf noodles in the store, then Market Kokoro is for you.

In bringing miso to Mzansi, one of the biggest insights is about the importance of meeting customers where they are, both in terms of tastes and locations.

On episode 6 of The Finance Ghost Plugged in with Capitec, Lu-ise and Ruan share the journey behind building a cross-cultural brand.

Episode 6 covers:

  • How travelling sparked the idea for Market Kokoro – and how this married couple turned a dream to bring this culture and food back home into a working business
  • Why their unique mix of skills (Ruan as an attorney and Lu-ise with a background in film and hospitality) lead to success
  • The background to Market Kokoro in South Africa and their involvement with the business
  • What makes the retail landscape in Cape Town different from Johannesburg – and how they adapt to each
  • Why additional sources of income are crucial while getting a business off the ground
  • The benefit of tapping into governmental organisations to help launch in a specific city
  • The consumer licensing opportunity in South Africa and how Japan’s model inspired their approach

The Finance Ghost plugged in with Capitec is made possible by the support of Capitec Business. All the entrepreneurs featured on this podcast are clients of Capitec. Capitec is an authorised Financial Services Provider, FSP number 46669.

Listen to the podcast here:

Read the transcript:

The Finance Ghost: Welcome to this episode of The Finance Ghost plugged in with Capitec. We are deep in November at the time of recording and by the time you hear this, it will probably already be December. So we are in ‘silly season’ and people are busy, trying to finish things off before the end of the year. 

Speaking of finishing things off, my guests today have been out there in the wild, building out their new store today, as they have been doing for the past few days and will probably still be doing for the next few years. Well, not that one store. If you’re still building the same store in a few years time, something has gone horribly wrong. But they’ll certainly be building this business for a few years. I’m really looking forward to chatting to these two. I think it’s going to be a huge amount of fun. 

So my guests today are Ruan Botha and Lu-ise Hattingh of Market Kokoro. We will discuss their exact involvement with the group later in the podcast, along with that wonderful name of Asian descent. Well, not Ruan and Lu-ise, you guys definitely are not of Asian descent. You are both firmly South African, athough at this stage I’m actually starting to wonder if you might have honourary citizenship in Japan or Korea or wherever else, never mind South Africa, because you are doing so much work in this space to bring these cultures to South Africa. 

Welcome to the show. It’s going to be a lot of fun.

Lu-ise Hattingh: Thank you. Thank you so much for having us.

Ruan Botha: Yeah, it’s great to be here.

The Finance Ghost: So, I think let’s jump straight into the word ‘kokoro’, which is so interesting. And, as you described it to me before we started recording this podcast, it effectively refers to the heart and the spirit (and hopefully I got that right). I think it’s such a lovely term, and it speaks directly to the way you’re actually building this business.

So, the backstory. There’s a lot for us to unpack here in terms of your relationship with Market Kokoro overseas and in South Africa, because it is an overseas brand that was then started here some years ago. And then you’ve been involved in developing it within the country and certainly in the Western Cape in particular, although you do have some business interests in it in Gauteng as well. Even your own podcast on some of this cultural-type stuff, Ruan, which we’ll get to later. But let’s start right at the beginning – that’s enough of a tease of what’s to come. 

You’re a husband-and-wife team. You’re both young entrepreneurs. How did you get here? What was the backstory of the travels, and how this culture just grabbed you and inspired you to spend your day sweating it out, building out new stores?

Ruan Botha: Yeah, so I grew up in a small town in the Western Cape. And basically, it was pre-internet, so the library was the only means of connecting to the outside world. There was this one particular book that really stuck with me. It was a book on the Edo period or the Shogun period in Japan, and it had these beautiful illustrations of Japanese armour and just a completely different culture to anything that I’ve experienced up until that point. In South Africa, we knew China fairly well back then, but Japan was a little bit of a mystery. And so from a young age, I’ve had my eye on Japan. 

Obviously, as a teenager, I got introduced to Japanese pop culture, anime and the like. So, Japan has been in the background for a big part of my life. And that’s kind of how I managed to pull Lu-ise into the realm of Japan.

Lu-ise Hattingh: I, on the other hand, had zero interest in Japan. I had my eye more on Europe. But, fast-forward a couple of years from Ruan’s teenage self watching anime, we ended up visiting Japan in 2016, just as a fun trip for two weeks. And when we came back, we were obsessed. We were like, “We just… We need more. More, please.” 

And we just realised that it is such a culture with so much depth and so much to learn from. Fast-forward another couple of years to 2018, and we found ourselves engaged, ready to get married, and looking for an exciting honeymoon adventure!

Ruan Botha: We got an opportunity to go and work in Japan. A couple of months after getting married, we joke and said that we left on ‘an extended honeymoon’. And yeah, for three years, we lived in Japan where we immersed ourselves in the food, the culture – the retail obviously, by extension. We kept on reminding ourselves, “There’s so much that we want to take back to South Africa.” 

We didn’t take this opportunity to live in Japan to escape South Africa. We are, as you mentioned at the start, very much South African. The idea was just to have a little bit of a ‘walkabout’, as they would say, and to go and experience a different country. But while we were there, we just wanted to come back and bring a lot of our experience that we enjoyed in Japan back to South Africa.

Lu-ise Hattingh: And of course, Japan – and especially the city where we lived, Miyazaki – was quite close to Korea. So we got to experience Korea a bit as well. And, same thing – the food got us. The food definitely got to us in Korea, and I think the retail, the experiences and the culture got to us in Japan.

The Finance Ghost: Well done on rather choosing to bring back South Korea because I think, if you brought back learnings from North Korea, that would be quite problematic. I’m not sure we’d be doing this podcast, for example. At least, not with my consent. No, I’m just kidding. 

So when you were working in Japan, was that like the classic ‘teach English offshore’ kind of vibe, or what were you doing? It was that, right?

Lu-ise Hattingh: Yes, that’s why we went over. And then I eventually started working as an operations specialist for a US-based company. So I was working remotely. And then that’s also where Ruan got involved with JETRO.

Ruan Botha: Yeah, so we’ll get into the consumer product licensing side of things. And in our preparation, I spoke about how Japan is next level with that. But there, I got a lot of experience working with a local municipality as well and then, from there, got introduced to an organisation called JETRO.

The Finance Ghost: Okay, interesting. And I do want to take one step back before we get into some of that, because it really is just such a cool story.

How old were you guys when you met? Because it almost sounds like Ruan, you kidnapped her to Japan the first time, or basically just force-fed her anime and then eventually she was like, “Oh my gosh. If this guy is the one, I’m going to have to just stomach this and get over it. It’s Dragon Ball Z or nothing.”

Lu-ise Hattingh: That’s exactly how it happened. He captured me when I was still a teenager. We met when I was 19, and Ruan was 20 – the night of his birthday, actually, we met – and the rest is history. We’ve been together for 14 years now.

The Finance Ghost: Amazing. Very cool story.

Ruan Botha: In my defence, I just mentioned Japan and Lu said, “Okay, let’s go check it out.” And then, Asia did the rest.

The Finance Ghost: Were you wearing shogun armour and had one of those really big samurai swords when you mentioned Japan? And she said, “Oh, you know, let’s go have a look. You know, still deciding.” But I mean, she seems to have embraced it now, which is quite exciting. So whatever your tactics were, they clearly worked. 

So, let’s move on to understanding more about this JETRO thing that you mentioned and then let’s get into some of your background. Just walk us through what that is and how that shaped the rest of your journey.

Ruan Botha: Cool. So I am an attorney by profession – Attorney of the South African High Court. But, going into law, I knew that was not necessarily what I wanted to do with my life. I knew it was a means to an end – which sounds kind of rude, I guess. 

But for me, a legal background (unless you specialise, obviously that’s great), as an introduction to everything in South Africa, is quite broad. And it touches on a lot of different subjects.

The Finance Ghost: Look, it’s the same reason that I studied accounting, so I completely get it. Like, 100%.

Ruan Botha: Yeah, it opens a lot of different doors, right? I think accounting is maybe even more useful, because you get down to the nuts and bolts of a lot of things. 

With a legal background, you get to sample bits of different companies. They say, “A clever person learns from their mistakes, but a wise man learns from other people’s mistakes.” And I think, in the legal profession, you get to see a lot of mistakes made by different businesses or organisations, and taking the little lessons from there has been very useful and helpful. 

But then, after that, coming back from Japan, I got an opportunity to work for the Japanese External Trade Organisation, which is a Japanese government-related organisation that promotes trade from Japan to South Africa. 

They identify various local South African partners, whom they then recommend to Japanese corporates or small businesses to kind of foster export-import relationships. And they’re based out of Sandton in Johannesburg. So, they work really hard to help SMEs in South Africa connect to Japan and, at the same time, help Japanese companies connect with South Africa.

The Finance Ghost: And that’s JETRO, right? The Japanese External Trade Organisation. 

Ruan Botha: Yeah, that’s right.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, got it. And then Lu-ise, your stuff is so interesting because, as far as I know, you have this film and hospitality background, right? You worked in some startups there. You kind of mentioned it’s such a diverse set of skills, which I guess is probably why this team works so well.

But before we even talk about the combination of those skills – just your own background, what you bring to this thing, how that journey was shaped – it’s so interesting to see how you got to where you are now. What have been some of the learnings and interesting nuggets along the way from that?

Lu-ise Hattingh: Yeah, I think hospitality and film sets you up for a really high-paced environment. If there’s anything that puts you through the wringer, I think it’s those two industries specifically. 

It really teaches you about thinking on your feet, planning meticulously, executing on those plans to the T, and then just being really versatile. If you’re hired on a set for holding a boom, you’re probably going to do multiple other things, like wipe sweat off actors’ faces and run around for their specific dietary requirements. 

So, that’s kind of where I started – behind the camera. I studied acting, but then realised I’m too short, fat and ugly to be an actress, so I had to go behind the scenes. And that’s just really where I started to get interested in operations and what goes on behind the ‘behind the scenes’.

So, I got really into the inner workings of what makes a business work because I think that every set, every production, is a small business in itself. You have your finances, you have your planning, you have your strategies. So, that’s where I started my journey into business. I worked with small businesses, startups from there and with founders growing their businesses. 

And I think the main lesson, or what I bring into the retail space, is I think that every day in a retail store is almost like a show or a performance or a film set. Before opening, before the curtain goes up, you have your prepping, your cleaning of the store. You’re making sure that everything’s on track and everyone’s there. All the actors (AKA your chefs and your cashiers), they’re ready, they’re prepped, they’re hyped up for the day. 

And then, when the doors open, that’s when the curtain goes up, and it’s showtime. And you have to smile and wave. Even if a customer comes in and you know they’re a little bit upset about something, or there are some challenges, you have to just keep the show going.

Ruan Botha: Yeah, there might not be applause all the time or a standing ovation, but you’ve got to keep the energy. And also, inevitably, you can plan and rehearse as much as you can…

Lu-ise Hattingh: …But someone’s going to forget their words!

Ruan Botha: Along the line, the light’s going to fall out of the attic, or someone’s going to slip and fall, or forget their lines. And you just have to roll with those punches.

Lu-ise Hattingh: Yeah. And I think a big thing for me is keeping the team together, keeping that motivation going. When you’re on set, the days are long and the months are long, and they all roll into each other. It becomes really challenging to keep that energy up. 

And the same happens in retail. You have to keep those guys going, and you have to really try your best to keep the smiles up, keep the energy up and keep the motivation there.

Ruan Botha: What Lu-ise taught me about all of that is that, especially in theatre, when it’s your opening weekend, the energy is high. Things are going well, and you’re running on this adrenaline rush. 

But the first performance can’t be different from the last performance. The people who paid the same price for the ticket go to the closing performance, and that still has to deliver the same excitement to the audience that the opening show did. 

And it’s exactly the same with retail, right? You need to…

Lu-ise Hattingh: …A Monday, Tuesday and Saturday have to be the same quality of experience, especially since we’re in experiential retail and not just, you know, your standard.

The Finance Ghost: So Lu-ise, I won’t comment on that self-deprecation there and your chances of being an actress. You’re lucky that we don’t use the video, or everyone would know you’re lying, which I’m sure people would agree with. Certainly Ruan would, definitely! 

But what I will comment on is that it’s just such an interesting combination of skills, which is really cool. And I guess that starts to tell us a little bit about how you split what you actually do in the business, what you each focus on.

And that leads into the next thing I wanted to ask you, which is: any tips you might have for these husband-and-wife teams out there (or romantic partners, obviously)? 

Before you answer that, one of the podcasts in this series was with Hugh Cunningham. He’s got a pharmacy, The Local Choice – a franchise that he runs with his wife, Yolandi. It was only Hugh on that particular podcast, but he had some really interesting advice there. So, I’m keen to hear your advice and then compare what it’s like versus his, for example. 

And anyone in that position, go and listen to the Hugh Cunningham podcast as well. You’ll get two different perspectives, two very different generational views as well. They are quite a lot older than the two of you, so it’s interesting to get their opinions versus yours. 

So, hit us with the husband and wife pro tips for being in business together and thriving, not just in the business, but also in your relationship, because that is obviously very important.

Lu-ise Hattingh: I think communication. That’s a boring answer, but communication is just so important. You have to choose your lane, as well, and choose your kind of department. Stick to that, but then also bring each other on the journey. So, communicate with each other across departments, don’t silo yourself into just what you’re busy with. Because if you’re just both going to be on your own journey, you might end up in completely different places.

Ruan Botha: Yeah, I think that’s a very good answer – well. I should think that’s a good answer…

Lu-ise Hattingh: That’s our answer! [laughing]

Ruan Botha: …I should think it’s a good answer. [laughing]

The Finance Ghost: Very diplomatic, Ruan. Very well done. I see no disagreement here.

Ruan Botha: But to echo what Lu mentioned – play to your strengths. I know that what Lu can do, I can’t perform on that level. And hopefully there are a few things that Lu feels like, “Okay, let me rather leave that to Ruan to do.” 

She mentioned bringing each other on the journey because the one hand needs to know what the other hand is doing. And that sounds maybe a little bit obvious, but I think the benefit of starting a business or running a business with your life partner is that there’s no one you trust more. So it’s easy to kind of just go, “Listen, I know what Lu’s doing. She’s making decisions that are the best for us as a whole and for the business.” But then, unfortunately, what could happen is that at some point, you might feel a little bit out of the loop and then start doing double work instead of really dividing the tasks and…

Lu-ise Hattingh: Divide and conquer!

Ruan Botha: …divide and conquer, yeah! So I think that’s very important. And it’s very difficult to, after a long day, come home and switch off and be husband and wife, but also, at the same time, you’ve got the business that you’re worried about and thinking about and that you need to problem-solve. 

So I think it’s also important to set aside time to be like, “Okay, no shop talk here. We just relax and chat about whatever we feel passionate about.”

Lu-ise Hattingh: But also, that said, we love what we do so much, so it’s really hard to leave it at the door and go, “This is date night, only.” Because we’re just so excited about the projects that we’re doing, and we want to talk about it. It’s what’s going on in our lives at the moment. 

So, I wish I could say that we’re really strict about it and we have these rules, “no shop talk at date night”, but it’s hard. And we’ve kind of decided not to be too hard on ourselves if that does spill over, because we just enjoy it. It lights us up. And we enjoy riffing on each other and going like, “Yes, that’s a good idea. Oh, you know, we should do this, we should do that.” 

At the moment, it’s what excites us, so we go with the flow.

Ruan Botha: Yeah, I think that’s quite unique to our case specifically. Because Lu and I are optimists, and we’re both dreamers. So I think that dreaming part, and thinking about how we can improve or what new ventures or opportunities await – that’s also what drew us together from the start. It’s that we share that passion, and we infect each other with that excitement.

The Finance Ghost: Look, you have to be an optimist. You absolutely have to be an optimist. It’s such a cool thing to have brought up because you have to be a dreamer, you have to be so bonkers, to believe in what you’re building. 

And we’ll get to that shortly, but one of my favourite concepts – and people have said this to me before – it basically goes along the lines of, “Pessimists sound really clever. They can point out all the stuff that could go wrong. But optimists build the world around them and figure it out as they go.” And somewhere in the middle is probably a sensible way to go through life. I guess that would be a realist? I don’t know. 

But if you’re not more on the optimistic side of things, then you are definitely not going to build a business. So, I think the fact that you guys share that is such a big part of it. You’ve both got to believe, all the time. You just have to!

Perseverance is the first moat in any business. If you stop believing, everyone stops believing. That’s just how this game works.

Lu-ise Hattingh: I want to just quickly share a really cute story on something that happened today. So, today was a big day for setting up the shelves in the shop (and that is really freaking complicated – someone should make shelves that aren’t so complicated to set up!). And we were figuring this out and building the shelves, and one moment, Ruan was just really over it. 

He looked at me and he was like, “Honestly, they should really put something on the box or say like, ‘This is not recommended to set up with anyone other than the person you’re preparing to spend your life with.’” I was like, “That is so true!” And also, the same goes for setting up four shops in one year.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, 100%. You may as well go through it together, right? So let’s talk about these shops. Let’s talk about the business. You’ve given us some wonderful insights into who you are as people. Such an interesting couple, loads of passion. You’ve done a lot of cool stuff, you’ve travelled. 

It’s amazing how often travel creates a lot of thinking around businesses. I always encourage people – if you can travel in your early life, do it. You don’t have to stay in fancy places, you just need to go and immerse yourself in cultures that are so different to yours. You’ll learn a ton and you’ll come back with ideas you never dreamed that you would have. 

And that idea, for you guys at least, is to be involved with Market Kokoro. So let’s understand what that thing is really. If I go onto the Market Kokoro website, it talks about being ‘South Africa’s online Asian grocery store’. You talked about getting your hands very dirty today, fighting with shelving, so clearly it’s an omnichannel model. 

And I think that talks to your specific involvement with this business in South Africa, because you didn’t start Market Kokoro in South Africa. It’s more that you’ve spotted an opportunity to build out a franchise footprint of these stores, and to really work with the broader group in actually developing the business at the end of the day – in the Western Cape specifically, although you do have a store in Joburg as well. I actually saw in the press today that there’s a nice deal with Pick n Pay now from a head-office perspective at Market Kokoro. So, very interesting stuff is happening there. 

If you could just walk us through firstly, Market Kokoro South Africa (which is not you guys specifically), and then the franchise strategy (the piece that you are building) and how you got involved with this thing.

Ruan Botha: Basically, Market Kokoro Corporate was started by a Korean family in the late ’80s, early ’90s, I believe. They grew to five or six corporate-owned shops and then identified franchising as a viable way of growing their footprint. And that’s where we came in. 

We, through our professional network, knew the franchisor quite well, and we’d worked with them in different capacities. Then, when this franchise opportunity presented itself, we said, “You know what? Let’s give it a shot.” Because it’s something that we feel passionate about, and the brand is such a vibrant brand that, again, we got excited about it. 

And I think so many other people get excited about Market Kokoro. It’s not just a stale offering. It’s a surprising offering. Customers who visit us walk into a shop or a store and they’re like, “Wow, I want to come back here.” They want to spend time there. And that’s quite unique, right? 

Usually for South Africans, the retail experience is, “I’m in and I’m out. I hope the queue is not too long. Where’s the cashier that’s available? Can I pay for 20 items at the money market without anyone complaining? Can I just get out?” Where Market Kokoro as a brand has created an environment that’s way more experiential. Obviously, it’s not just built on experience, but the experience part adds to what we do.

Lu-ise Hattingh: And, just to add to that, that’s what we brought to it. The experience part, and applying what we learned from our travels into how to change it from being a store to an experience. And adding selfie opportunities, adding touchpoints for customers to do more in the shop than just buy a couple of groceries.

Ruan Botha: So our first store, we opened a year ago – Market Kokoro Linden. And the big thing that we introduced there is instant ramen cookers. So basically, you can buy your instant ramen, and then we’ve got these noodle cookers that you can prepare it and make it yourself. And that just blew up massively. Because it brings that experience to it, it’s something – in today’s age, most consumers have got a gateway to the world through their phones. They might never have been to Asia, they might never set foot in Asia, but at least they can see what’s going on in Asia. And if they see something cool going on there, they want to experience it.

Now, not many people are going to get on a plane and fly to Korea or Japan to go and cook instant noodles, so I think it’s a unique opportunity for us to bring that little bit of Asia to South Africa.

So, we opened the store in Linden in August 2024, and then Sea Point, December 2024. Then we’ve got a store in Worcester, and now we’re building the Western Cape flagship in Belleville. And the franchise – there’s a different franchisee in Durban, and then there’s about seven or so corporate-owned stores in Gauteng. 

I think the focus for us in this whole experience, as you mentioned – it’s omnichannel. You can buy a lot of things online, but because there’s such a big experience part tied to it as well, people still do want to experience the in-store experience. And that, at the end of the day, is also something very important to us. 

Obviously, Asian food has been popping off tremendously over the last couple of years. I think if you go back ten years and you try to sell miso to someone, they’d be like, “What the hell is miso?” Now, the consumer is a little bit more educated. But at the same time, we’ve got to meet the consumer where they are. And that’s also why our footprint is so important. It’s blowing up, but it’s still very much a niche, I would say. 

And also, people still have the perception that if they buy Asian ingredients, they’ve got to cook Asian food, whereas there are a lot of Asian ingredients you can easily incorporate into your South African cooking and just add that little kick. Not necessarily spicy, but just putting it on another level. 

I think a low-hanging-fruit example is Kewpie mayonnaise versus a regular mayonnaise. If you’ve tried Kewpie or sushi mayonnaise…

Lu-ise Hattingh: You’ll never go back.

Ruan Botha: …it’ll be very difficult to go back to regular mayonnaise.

The Finance Ghost: As a sushi fan, I’ve got to say that makes absolute sense.

Ruan Botha: Yeah, so I think the thing in Japan, and Korea as well, they’ve got a big convenience-store culture where they meet the consumer, where the consumers are. Now, even though we’re not on a convenience store level, we need to think, “Okay, where can we position ourselves that’s easily accessible to different consumer bases, so to speak?” 

And then, yeah, working with Pick n Pay and working with head office, I think Market Kokoro as a brand is firmly behind the idea that ‘a rising tide raises all ships’. And that’s something that also resonates deeply with Lu and me because, like we said, we’re optimists and we want to believe that a blue ocean strategy can be applied to the benefit of multiple stakeholders. 

So that’s kind of the approach that we have. We’ve got the corporate-owned stores, we’ve got the number of franchises that we run. And, because we’re a new franchise, it’s an exciting dynamic between tried-and-tested knowledge, and a lot of product knowledge and experience, and then…

Lu-ise Hattingh: Unknown waters!

Ruan Botha: …and then the unknown waters, but also a fresh energy and the experience of living in Japan and in Asia for a bit, that we can also bring back and say, “Hey, how about we present it in this way that can make it interesting and maybe more accessible to local consumers?” 

Because also, just to end that off real quick, the majority of our consumers are South African. We’re not targeting the Asian community in South Africa. We are very much backed by South African consumers who love our brand and who support us on a daily basis.

The Finance Ghost: I had a look at the Google reviews, by the way, for your Sea Point store, and it certainly suggests that people are very stoked to go and buy their noodles, cook them on site. So if you’ve got one of these stores near you, if you live in Joburg or Cape Town or even Worcester – I was mildly surprised to learn that, pretty exciting for the humble town of Worcester – go and check this stuff out. Go give it a try. It does sound pretty good. 

It’s also quite a rapid expansion, so I guess my business brain immediately wonders. Is this something that the two of you are doing full-time? Are you having to side hustle to actually make it work, or is it able to support you at the moment? Because obviously that’s one of the big challenges for entrepreneurs, especially in the early stages.

Lu-ise Hattingh: So we both are consultants in our own capacity. I still consult with businesses, small businesses, founders growing their businesses, mostly based in the UK. I spend 80% of my time on my consulting and only 20% on Market Kokoro. But that 20% doesn’t include the weekends and the after-work 6pm to 10pm.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, I was going to say there’s no way it’s 20%. It’s impossible. I refuse to believe it. Ruan, what’s your split – your real split? This is like that David Beckham meme from Netflix where he pokes his head in at Posh Spice and just says, “Be honest, Victoria, be honest.” So, give us the real number here, Ruan, not this 20% nonsense.

Ruan Botha: I think, yeah, I spend the majority of my time. So, as you mentioned, I also consult. My consulting portfolio is much smaller, so I don’t have to spend as much time, fortunately. I would say I’m the opposite of Lu. I spend about 80% of my time on Market Kokoro and maybe 20% consulting. But yeah, these are our babies, so we need to nurse them and give them the attention they are due. 

But I think also, not to just shamelessly plug Capitec, but that’s also where they’ve been very supportive in their offering and being able to work with them. And then the business, obviously expanding very rapidly. But at the same time, I do also want to give a shout-out to our customers and our loyal clients who pull up to our opening events and stay the course in supporting us.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, absolutely. I don’t know if you guys have read Shoe Dog, the story of Nike. If you haven’t, then you should. You’re both nodding, so you have read it. 

So what I love most about it… Because I hate the whole ‘success-porn’ movement. It’s like, “Oh, I’m here on a yacht, and I worked three hours today, and now I’m unbelievably wealthy. And you can do it too, just buy my course.” It’s the absolute worst. Anyone who has built anything of actual substance knows this is a lie. 

And I honestly recommend that if you are starting a business, then lock in other sources of income if you can. If it’s a bit of consulting, it really helps. You’re dreaming if you think you’re going to start a business, work 8 to 5, and pay your salary month one guaranteed. Unless you have very low overheads, that is a huge, huge risk. So I would not recommend doing that. 

I mean, I’m five years deep in my business. I can tell you I’m still doing 80-hour weeks. It’s no better than my investment banking days, to be honest. It’s probably at least as bad. It just is what it is. The weekends mesh into weekdays and evenings, and it is simply just a tough thing. 

And it gets much harder when you have kids, and you have to really try and then make time for everything. Kids are the ultimate startup. They definitely take a lot more than 20% of your time, that much I can tell you.

But I think the way the two of you are doing it is great, which is to build out this thing and then make sure that you can actually allow the business to stand on its feet without having to necessarily rely on it too soon, because too many businesses die that way.

And that brings me back to Shoe Dog, because Phil Knight, who started Nike, continued to work as an accountant, I think it was, for quite some time while he was literally selling shoes out the back of his car. That part of the story is amazing for me, and it’s true. And the one thing I love about that book is he’s just so honest, where he says that if he hadn’t done it that way around, it would probably have failed.

So in America today, that startup culture is very much around raising money, doing it with someone else’s money, writing some cool blogs about failure and success. We don’t have that startup culture in South Africa. It just doesn’t exist. You’re probably going to have to bootstrap. If you’re lucky, a bank like Capitec (and they are very good with this) will support what you’re doing. They might give you some of the finance to roll this thing out. But generally speaking, it’s quite hard to get that in South Africa. So you’ve got to hustle and you’ve got to give yourself some runway.

Ruan Botha: 100%. Just to echo what you were saying earlier, we kind of, especially with social media, right, we get quite enamoured or blindsided by the overnight success that’s been 10 years in the making. It just looks nice. “Oh, start your own business, and then you can work three hours and just chill.” But friends of ours mentioned that as soon as you start your own business, you switch your 9 to 6 (or 9 to 5, or whatever it is) to a 24/7. It’s just continuous.

The Finance Ghost: The plus side, of course, is that you get control over your time. So I will say, if anyone’s listening to this and going, “Oh, my goodness, I’m not going to start a business now.” What is amazing is the amount of control you do actually have over your time. It’s a big win. You’re choosing when you work as opposed to someone else choosing for you, which, for me at least, makes a really big difference. 

Not everyone cares about it as much as I do. And that’s why not everyone should be an entrepreneur. I genuinely don’t believe entrepreneurship can be taught. It’s not for everyone. I think you can learn some underlying skills that you can apply to a business, and the two of you have proof of that – film and hospitality meets legal. But bring those skills together and, if you define those skills properly and broadly enough, then you understand how they actually relate to a business and what you really learned along the way, which I think is just fantastic.

So, something I wanted to ask you, given that you’ve now got stores in both Cape Town and Joburg, what are some of the differences that you’ve observed between the two cities? Other than the quality of the pavement outside and how often the grass gets cut, obviously. But what are some of the other differences in the retail environment for Cape Town vs Joburg?

Lu-ise Hattingh: It’s quite a different consumer. We’ve kind of established or spoken about this quite a lot and realised that it’s more the older consumer that’s so different, and then the younger consumer (because they have access through their phone to similar things), they tend to kind of ‘magnet’ towards the same kind of things.

So, some differences that we’ve noticed are that in Cape Town, you compete with not only other restaurants or other retail opportunities, but you compete with tourist attractions. Because a lot of our customers, in Sea Point especially, are tourists.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, I was about to joke and say, “You’re competing with the ocean.” And then I thought, “No,maybe I shouldn’t say that.” But actually, it’s right. You are. You’re competing with the mountain and the penguins.

Ruan Botha: Yeah, 100%. There’s a whole host of things that you can go and enjoy, experiences that you can go on, that are on your doorstep. Why go to a retail store in Sea Point, you know? So, you are not necessarily competing with other Asian grocery stores or small restaurants or anything. You’re competing with, like you said, the ocean. The mountain.

Lu-ise Hattingh: Something that is also interesting between Joburg and Cape Town is that Joburg has a more captive audience. So they also don’t mind driving a little bit to get to your shop. Just like Capetonians don’t mind driving to a wine farm over the weekend, Joburgers don’t mind driving 40, 50 minutes, maybe even an hour to a retail shop for that experience. So, you have more of a captive audience.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, this just blows the minds of Capetonians. So I grew up in Joburg, I lived there for 27 years or whatever it was, and in Cape Town for the past decade. And it’s just mind-blowing how different these cities are. And that is one of the single biggest differences. You’re absolutely right. 

And I think it’s because of the road network. You can get from one side of Joburg to the other in like 30 minutes. In Cape Town, you could barely get from Milnerton into the city in 30 minutes, because there’s an ocean and a mountain and not enough roads and too many people. So, it really is a factor. It’s actually a big, big factor.

Lu-ise Hattingh: In Joburg it’s almost like a ‘build it and they will come’. Whereas in Cape Town, it’s…you have to take it to the people. And that’s especially what we realised with our Sea Point store. Someone from Durbanville does not want to drive all the way to Sea Point, especially not when there’s a rugby game on at Green Point.

The Finance Ghost: And vice versa. Half the people in Sea Point think that Durbanville is in KZN because they’ve never driven any further than Newlands. It’s just a fact about the city. It blows my mind, but these really are the facts. Honestly.

Ruan Botha: Like you said, you take Joburg, you’ve got people commuting from Pretoria to Joburg on a daily basis. It’s a 40-minute or an hour’s drive. An hour out of Cape Town ,that’s on the other side of the mountain! 

So yeah, I think the other thing where Cape Town is quite different to Joburg is that there’s quite a significant tourist contingent to Cape Town as opposed to Joburg. I think you’ve got a lot more digital nomads living in Cape Town than you do in Joburg. 

Someone coming from a New York, or a Los Angeles, or a London, where you’ve been exposed to Asian products for a lot longer. They come and they live in South Africa or in Cape Town for six months or three months – they still want to buy those products. And that’s kind of where they figure into your store as well. 

Where Joburg, you don’t necessarily get… Listen, I think Joburg as a tourist destination has got a lot to offer, or a lot to develop that they can offer. But the reality of the fact is people touch down, head to Kruger National or head to Cape Town from OR Tambo. So we don’t necessarily see a lot of tourist customers shopping in Joburg.

The Finance Ghost: As a retail business, you just have to recognise this stuff. That’s absolutely right. There’s no point in beating around the bush with it, it’s just the reality of the two cities. They are two different places, they attract very different clientele, and if you don’t adapt from one to the other, it’s almost guaranteed that you will fail. 

It was very interesting in this podcast season. I also got to speak to Ricky Ruthenberg. He’s the co-founder and CEO of Bootlegger, obviously now a national brand in the coffee shop restaurant space. They actually started in Sea Point, then eventually built out in the Western Cape, and then went to Joburg. Then they had to deal with COVID – big disaster. They’ve gone back to Joburg subsequently, and they’ve made it a success. Big lessons learned along the way. 

And it’s almost a different world, the two cities. He talks about how when they went to Joburg, they practically had to restart with the brand. They thought they’d go there and people would know it. And actually, everyone thought Bootlegger was a bottle store with the ‘S’ on the end. So they’ve got to teach people there’s no ‘S’ on the end, it’s a coffee shop. 

It was a fascinating podcast episode. If anyone listening to this is really enjoying this concept of these consumer-facing retail businesses, go and check out that Bootlegger podcast as well, because I think you will really enjoy it. 

Just one other thing around your regional focus. So I think you mentioned to me when we were chatting before this podcast that Wesgro has been quite a useful pillar of support for your ambitions down here in the Western Cape, which I found very interesting. Not super surprising because I have had engagement with Wesgro years ago, I must be honest. 

And I’m keen to hear more details on that. What was your experience? Because other entrepreneurs listening to this might be keen to understand how Wesgro and similar organisations, if they can find them, might actually help them.

Lu-ise Hattingh: So as first-time business owners, we didn’t know what to do or where to go to be legal and do what we need to do. Of course, the franchise offers some guidance and some things that we need to do. But Wesgro – and the GGDA in Joburg – they were tremendously helpful in supporting us. 

To provide us with what we needed to do, just guide us with all the compliance that we needed to have, all the certificates we needed to have. They’ve even helped us with advice on advertising and research. And they have a whole network of really kind and helpful people who have come across our path just because we connected with them and we reached out to them and asked them for help.

Ruan Botha: I think we were quite lucky. I met the Wesgro team through past endeavours, and same with the GGDA, we met them for a delegation we hosted in the past. But the crazy thing is, these guys are a significant resource that you can use. Not just a network that you can tap into, but they have good relations with the City of Cape Town, so they can get you answers to your questions real quick. They are very efficient and super helpful. They’re just a bunch of really helpful, very friendly people.

Lu-ise Hattingh: They helped us to expedite a lot of things that we needed. And it’s free!

Ruan Botha: Yeah, that’s the thing. The help that they provide is free. They might ask you a few things for their stats, like how many people you employ and things like that, to kind of gauge the economic impact. 

But yeah, they’ve really helped to also just make us feel, it’s going to sound weird, but to kind of feel that we are surrounded by people who care about us without having any stake in the business. They just really want to see us succeed as well and have made their resources available to us. I think, when you’re starting a business, any help that you can get from a semi-government-related organisation is fantastic.

The Finance Ghost: Absolutely. And it’s their whole mandate, right? To promote growth in Cape Town. My engagement with them was over 10 years ago. It was actually really interesting. I approached them because I was quite keen to potentially go work there. It was right near the end of my investment banking days. I was looking for something that was more based in Cape Town and it just wasn’t the right fit for everyone involved, but I was super impressed with the engagement with them. Solid people. And it’s nice to hear stories like these. It really is very cool. So, well done. 

And it just shows – the lesson is: if you reach out to people and you ask the question, the worst they can say is ‘no’. And the best that can happen is a whole lot of great stuff! So your upside versus your downside, that’s a great trade. The finance geek in me would take that trade every day, and I do suggest business owners do the same. Just ask the question, you’ve got nothing to lose, literally.

So we’ve talked a bit about experiential retail and how you’re building that out and how this thing is so different, and you’ve gotten involved in it, which is great. How your skills have come together, and the differences between these two big cities in South Africa, Cape Town and Joburg, and your experiences there. It’s been fascinating. 

There is one other big trend underneath all this, which we haven’t gotten to yet. And it’s a nice place to start to bring this podcast home, because this is the concept of consumer product licensing. It’s something they do so well in Asia. And this Korean movement, this ‘K-wave’, as I’ve seen it described, it’s a big thing. 

So it’s KPop Demon Hunters. It’s Squid Game. That was kind of the start of it for a lot of Western consumers. Netflix started bringing this Korean show to the world, and then they did KPop Demon Hunters, and everything just exploded. It became memes, all this stuff. It’s just gone from strength to strength. 

There’s a lot of other stuff as well. There are tons of Japanese IPs that people have been familiar with for decades now. Loads of anime, Pokémon, Dragon Ball Z, etcetera. It’s a whole different world. People do enjoy that culture and everything it means.

So, what do you think the opportunity is in South Africa to then expose consumers to this? What can we learn from this consumer product licensing culture that they’ve built in Asia? This behemoth of an industry, where you’ll see products that sometimes make no sense to Western eyes. 

Stuff like Crocs with all the funny little things on them – those are massive in Asia. And here it’s like, “Ooh, Crocs. It’s a bit weird that people wear them.” Sorry if I’m offending anyone, but, you know, they are Crocs. The number one way to not be offended about wearing Crocs is to not wear Crocs. Just kidding, let me stop there. 

Let me let you talk about consumer product licensing and what you think that could actually look like in South Africa.

Lu-ise Hattingh: I’ll leave that to Ruan, because he’s the expert.

The Finance Ghost: And by ‘expert’, you mean geek. I know that you mean geek, here. [laughing]

Lu-ise Hattingh: [laughing]

Ruan Botha: That’s where everything starts, right? I think the interesting thing about consumer product licensing is it’s a win-win situation. If you do your homework on what brands could resonate well with your target consumer, you get to introduce or sell your product using someone else’s IP, right? 

So, internationally known, let’s take Pokémon or KPop Demon Hunters. Everyone knows that. I’ve got a manufacturing plant manufacturing T-shirts in South Africa. I license that IP, I put it on my T-shirt, or I design some clothes, and then I sell it to a consumer. So, I get to leverage that global brand in a South African context. And that resonates quite strongly with me – supporting local manufacturing. So, how do you differentiate your white T-shirt from someone else’s white T-shirt imported from wherever? That could be a really strong differentiation point. 

The thing that I think Asia does really well when it comes to consumer product licensing is that they recognise that the human experience is vast and diverse, and people interact with a variety of products and things on a daily basis. And if I’m a fan of a specific IP, I might want to buy that Croc Jibbitz or whatever it’s called, right? I want to have the opportunity to buy that, at the end of the day.

The Finance Ghost: Look at this guy pretending that he’s ‘not quite sure what it’s called’. You know, “Oh, whatever it’s called.” Meanwhile, back at the ranch, this man has a wall of Crocs and Jibbitz and KPop Demon Hunters and little Market Kokoro things that he puts on them. Come now, be honest. I’m gonna quote ol’ David Beckham back in here again.

Ruan Botha: [laughing] Yeah, so the thing is that at the same time they also know that, even though I’m wearing Crocs and those Jibbitz, I want to go out to eat somewhere. So why not then have some noodles with the brand on? Because that’s a way that they’re going to get my attention, and I’m going to buy that brand of noodles. Also just to be part of the craze for a bit, but if I’m a fan, you know, that’ll be something – and the product is good of course, that’s vital – I’ll return to it. 

I think in the South African context, what’s been challenging for businesses – and that’s kind of where I find myself spending that 20% of my time that I’m not spending at Market Kokoro. I’m spending it on trying to develop the resources that businesses can use to make better decisions when it comes to (and better understanding) the anime consumer or the pop-culture consumer in South Africa. 

The demand is there. If you go to Comic Con Africa or Comic Con Cape Town, your mind will be blown. Your eyes will open to the vibrant communities that support these different IPs that are asking for these products. But the industry has been quite disorganised for the longest time. You have someone doing something, you have someone else doing something else. Simba brought out the Tazos, back in the 2000s or whatever, with Dragon Ball Z and Pokémon

The Finance Ghost: … Yeah, I remember that. Wow, that was a whack of nostalgia across the head.

Ruan Botha: Yeah, you’re welcome.

The Finance Ghost: Thank you. Yes, no, absolutely. Thank you.

Ruan Botha: You’re going to go dig through your flip file to see if you find any of…

The Finance Ghost: … I think my Tazos are long dead, but I certainly had them. I absolutely did have them.

Ruan Botha: Yeah. But the thing is – and this is where the blue ocean side of things comes into play as well – no information was ever shared, necessarily, on how well that promotion did for PepsiCo or Simba or whoever brought it in. But, as we go deeper and deeper into the information age, those resources become available, even though you need to go and dig for them a little bit. 

But I had an interview with Burger King for Comic Con Africa earlier this year, and they did a promotion with Naruto and the whole executive marketing team said, “No way. Naruto? Do South Africans watch anime? I’ve got no idea what this thing is. Let’s be conservative.” They ordered 300,000 units for a month-long promotion – so that’s 300,000 toys, essentially. They sold out within the first two weeks of that promotion. In their whole team, there were only two people who said, “Listen, I’ll resign if you don’t bring this promotion to South Africa.” So, you know, that information is vital to prove a point to Burger King. To say, “Okay, listen. We need to bring something similar next year.” 

But then, if you look at the box office in South Africa, everyone thinks cinemas are struggling; it’s a dying industry. Then we’ve got a release of Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle, which globally was a massive phenomenon. From my understanding, the local distributor thought they weren’t going to do too well. The movie grossed 9 million at the South African box office – $9 million, I believe. That’s the highest-grossing movie in South Africa. It out-grossed Superman, it out-grossed Fantastic Four – quite big names. 

So I think that shows that there’s a focus on these Asian brands, and they’ve got a lot of marketing power behind them. So, why not use those brands to promote your products and to promote your offering? I think, like you said earlier, it’s kind of a no-brainer, right? If there’s some information that backs it up, it’s really worthwhile to try and explore that.

The Finance Ghost: And the stuff is big. The one thing that I found so interesting is when that AI model came out that was copying that Studio Ghibli-style animation, people were furious. They were not just slightly angry. I think a lot of creatives have obviously been jilted by AI, and a lot of creative people are quite into a lot of this anime-type stuff and that style of Eastern storytelling, I suppose. But wow, people were angry about that Studio Ghibli thing. Frankly, as they should be. It really is beyond me why so much investment in AI is about going after art, as opposed to actually genuinely making people more efficient. But that’s a discussion for an entirely separate podcast, which we certainly won’t get distracted by now.

So, Ruan, there’s obviously a lot of passion for this stuff. Lu-ise, you’ve been kind of dragged along into it, but I think there’s some passion there as well for it, which is very cool. I think that’s great. And the lesson in there is how important it is to be passionate about the thing you’re building, because you are going to throw so much time and energy and everything else at it. 

I’ve got a couple more questions. We don’t have much time left at all. It’s been a nice long and juicy podcast. First one, you did mention Capitec earlier, but let’s just chat a little bit more about that. I think you’ve used them for franchise financing and a few other services, and to just help you grow the business. Been a bit of a lifeline, right? I’m not sure you would have been able to do it without them.

Lu-ise Hattingh: Absolutely. And they’ve been incredibly helpful, honestly. We’re not just saying this, but they have really been so helpful. We moved over to them quite recently actually, but they’ve really been helpful in setting up our…

Ruan Botha: Accounts.

Lu-ise Hattingh: …accounts, setting up our…

Ruan Botha: POS system. 

Lu-ise Hattingh: Yes, and… You take over. [laughing]

Ruan Botha: I think the key thing from Capitec’s side is obviously they’ve got a very strong focus, especially Capitec Business. They’ve got a strong focus on the SME sector, and I think it’s no secret that the small-medium-micro-enterprise industry in a country plays a big role in the backbone of that country. If it’s strong and vibrant, the country is all the better for it, you know? It creates a lot of opportunities.

Lu-ise Hattingh: I think philosophically, we just really align with Capitec.

Ruan Botha: We’re really aligned, yeah. Which is maybe a la-di-da answer, but at the same time on a practical level, as bankers, they don’t feel like people sitting in an ivory tower, locked away, that you’ve got to phone a call centre. I think their target is to answer a call within like 5 seconds…?

Lu-ise Hattingh: 30 seconds, yeah.

Ruan Botha: …or 30 seconds? Like, It’s insane. And it’s just because they are so consumer-focused. And for a business where we need to be consumer-focused – where we need to focus on going to the customer and giving them what they want, when they want it – it’s great to…

Lu-ise Hattingh: That’s exactly what they’ve done for us.

Ruan Botha: It’s refreshing to have a bank provide that service to us. Helping us…like, I don’t have time to sit on a phone call waiting for hours to chat to someone to give me an answer. So, they feel part of the team, as opposed to just this grudge that I’ve got to go deal with someone at the nearest branch or whatever.

The Finance Ghost: So, I think that’s exactly why they resonate with entrepreneurs. Because they do obsess over their customers, honestly. The fact that they made this podcast possible really shows it. 

And honestly, every single guest I’ve asked on this podcast series gives roughly the same answer, which kind of goes like this. “I’m on a Capitec podcast so I know it sounds like I’m going to say something that I kind of have to say right now,” but it actually comes across so sincerely, from every single one of them. Everyone says Capitec has been a great partner, and so it really is lovely to hear that.

Ruan, last question, and I’m aiming this at you because, as far as I know, it’s only you doing this (although if Lu-ise was in the background of these podcasts, she should tell me). But, such is your passion for a lot of these cultural elements and this content that you also have your own podcast. 

What is it all about? Where can people find it? And perhaps most importantly, do you wear Crocs while you are recording it? That is a very important additional question.

Lu-ise Hattingh: He definitely wears Crocs while doing it! [laughing]

The Finance Ghost: Oh, no! Is it? I hope there’s no video then. I’m hoping it’s just audio.

Ruan Botha: No, luckily it’s just static imagery.

The Finance Ghost: There we go.

Ruan Botha: Listen, I wouldn’t be much of a fan if I didn’t wear the Crocs. I need to drink the Kool-Aid. Lu’s been a tremendous support because, you know, sometimes it’s like, “What are you doing?” 

Yeah. The podcast is called the Not Just Anime Podcast. It started this year with eight episodes available. Half of the season is consumer-focused, and then the second half is more business-focused. And the idea is just to illuminate Japanese and Asian pop culture in South Africa, and to kind of provide people and potentially other businesses with some insights into how the fandom works, but also how the business side of things works when it comes to consumer product licensing and the pop culture content. 

And Lu’s background in film has helped me, actually quite tremendously, because the podcast is hard, man. The Finance Ghost is wild. What you’ve achieved is very impressive, and a ton of respect for doing what you’re doing.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, that’s very kind. Look, it is my business, and that’s the difference. I think for you, it’s adjacent to your business, but it’s also a passion project. So, I actually almost have more respect for that, because you’ve got to find the time, in and amongst everything else. Whereas my podcasting literally pays the bills, so in some respects it’s easier. My motivation is not just that I enjoy it, but also because I need to pay school fees. Whereas on your side, it is a bit different. Although I do really, really love what I do. I’m very lucky in that regard.

Ruan, Lu-ise, this has been such a fun chat. Thank you so much. I would certainly encourage listeners to go and check out Market Kokoro online. I’ve got to tell you, I’m pretty keen to go and have some noodles, either in Durbanville at this new store, or maybe in Sea Point. Or maybe you should just come and open one in Milnerton, then it’s nice and close to me at home. We can consult on locations, because I’ve lived in the area for about 10 years now. That would be quite fun. 

But thank you so much for your time. Thank you to Capitec for making this podcast possible. And if you’ve got a craving for some Asian culture, especially Japanese, Korean, maybe some stuff you’ve never experienced before – go and check it out. Expand your horizons and your taste buds, because that is what being alive is all about, at the end of the day. 

Ruan, Lu-ise, thank you so much for your time. It really has been lovely having you on the show.

Lu-ise Hattingh: Thank you so much. This has been so much fun.

Ruan Botha: Thank you, thank you! It was an awesome conversation. Thank you so much.

Ghost Bites (Fairvest | Mantengu | Premier Group – RFG Holdings)

3

Fairvest invests deeper in township fibre (JSE: FTA)

This may sound very random for a REIT, but there’s a yield and an upliftment of areas in which Fairvest has properties

Fairvest has previously invested around R477 million in Onepath, a subsidiary of Fairvest that acquires fibre network infrastructure in townships and leases it to Fibertime Networks (US spelling for some reason). The claim to fame is that households can be connected on a pay-as-you-go model for just R5 a day, which is fantastic.

But why would a REIT do this? Well, there are two main reasons.

The first is that the investment actually generates returns, in this case an annualised yield of 14.9% from November 2024 to September 2025. There’s certainly nothing wrong with that, particularly as these are triple-net leases that put all the insurance and maintenance costs on Fibertime.

The second is that it gives Fairvest useful information about these communities, which in turn informs their decisions around township-adjacent retail properties. This is an important growth area in South Africa.

To further the strategy, they’ve committed to invest up to R1 billion in aggregate in Onepath i.e. they are roughly halfway there.

Personally, I think anything that brings connectivity to marginalised communities should be celebrated, especially if the financial returns also stack up.


Mantengu has commissioned Langpan’s second chrome processing plant (JSE: MTU)

This is good news to cap off the year

Mantengu’s share price hasn’t yet recovered from the nasty drop in response to the recent set of financials. The company has lots of work to do, but there’s some good news around Langpan to help improve the financial prospects of the company.

Mantengu has successfully commissioned the second chrome processing plant at Langpan Mining. Langpan has 300,000 tonnes of tailings that will be fed into the new plant, giving them roughly 10 months of feed to work with. It looks like the proceeds from processing this feed will then be used to ramp up mining operations, as they need to get to 60,000 tonnes per month of chrome ore feed in order to sustain two processing plants.

There’s a PGM strategy in here as well, as the tailings contain PGMs that haven’t been recognised on the balance sheet as of yet. The company has promised to give a subsequent update to the market regarding the PGM strategy.


Premier Group and RFG Holdings shareholders approve their deal (JSE: PMR | JSE: RFG)

Approval at both meetings was unanimous

In a week in which Mr Price (JSE: MRP) showed us what a truly daft deal looks like, it’s worth reflecting on whether Premier Group and RFG Holdings are doing the right thing with their deal. As a reminder, Premier is acquiring RFG, but in reality it’s closer in spirit to a merger.

The market is comfortable with the transaction, as shown by the two share prices over the past few months:

For the sheer contrast of it, here’s what it looks like when the market is angry at a deal:

So, people aren’t overly worried about Premier’s acquisition of RFG Holdings. In fact, there’s bullish sentiment around it. I remain skeptical, as it’s not obvious to me that this deal is based on sensible underlying reasons for the companies to belong together. We have a private equity seller on one side and an acquirer on the other who can take advantage of relative earnings multiples to achieve an accretive deal. Accretive HEPS in the near-term doesn’t necessarily mean that the strategic fit over the next few years will work out as well as they hope.

Time will tell. The FMCG market is notorious for questionable deals. I hope we won’t see a situation where the combined group trades at a structurally lower multiple than before due to more erratic earnings and the difficulties investors will face in forecasting earnings. JSE investors are rewarding simplicity at the moment, not complexity.


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • A2 Investment Partners bought another R55 million worth of shares in Nampak (JSE: NPK). It comes through as a director dealing because they have representation on the board.
    • Adrian Gore sold Discovery (JSE: DSY) shares worth R50 million. He also entered into a put-call hedging structure, with puts at R229.28 and calls at R374.87. The current spot price is R227, so he’s protecting downside risk from these levels. The value of the hedge based on the put strike is a meaty R365 million.
    • Here’s a big disposal: a prescribed officer of Dis-Chem (JSE: DCP) – specifically Christopher Williams on the wholesale CJ Distribution side – sold shares worth R35 million. I’m glad they didn’t try to soften the messaging by talking about some kind of rebalancing.
    • The CFO of Lewis Group (JSE: LEW) sold shares worth over R1.3 million. The ol’ “portfolio rebalancing” rationale has struck again. A sale is a sale!
    • Acting through Titan Premier Investments, Christo Wiese bought shares in Brait (JSE: BAT) worth R608k.
    • The company secretary of Bidvest (JSE: BVT) sold shares worth R323k. Although the sale relates to a share price appreciation rights plan, the announcement isn’t explicit on whether this is only a taxable portion. I therefore assume that it isn’t.
    • Two directors of Spear REIT (JSE: SEA) bought shares worth R254k in aggregate.
    • A director of Afrimat (JSE: AFT) bought shares worth R84k.
    • The CEO of Vunani (JSE: VUN) bought shares worth R43k.
  • Astral Foods (JSE: ARL) announced the appointment of Johan Geel as CFO with effect from 1 March 2026. He will replace Dries Ferreira who has resigned as CFO. Johan’s most recent role was CFO at AFGRI Limited, so he has plenty of experience in the agriculture sector.
  • KAP (JSE: KAP) has implemented the category 2 disposal of Unitrans Swazi Holdings with an effective date of 1 December.
  • Supermarket Income REIT (JSE: SRI) confirmed that Fitch has reaffirmed the company’s existing investment grade rating on the debt (BBB+ with a stable outlook). For property companies, debt is part of their business model and so these ratings are critical.
  • The Conduit Capital (JSE: CND) mess is finally coming to an end, at least in the listed space. Having been suspended from trading for three years and with no meaningful ability to rectify the situation while they pursue various court processes, it’s time for this one to go. The JSE will delist the company on 19 December. If you’re unlucky enough to be stuck with shares in this thing, they will now be in an unlisted company.

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

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Mr Price has entered into a transaction agreement to acquire 100% of European value retailer NKD from private equity parties Fliegendes Pferd Midco, a UK company holding 98.22% and Fliegendes Pferd MEP, a German general partner holding 1.78%. Mr Price will pay a base purchase price of €415 million (R8,23 billion) subject to a maximum of €487 million (R9,66 billion), which will be settled by way of cash and debt. The deal, a category 2 transaction, is expected to close during Q2 2026.

Capitec Bank is to acquire 100% of Walletdoc, a local fintech providing scalable, innovative payment gateway solutions for merchants, including online and in-app payments, digital wallets, Instant EFT, payment links and real-time payouts. For Capitec, the acquisition is strategic, reinforcing its ongoing commitment to lower the cost of payments, broaden access to digital financial services, and promote local financial inclusion. Capitec will pay up to R400 million for the business.

Aligned with the Group’s strategic direction to simplify its portfolio by sharpening its focus on priority categories with sustainable growth potential, Libstar has sold its fresh mushroom operations. It has however retained the Denny brand which it has licensed to the purchaser for the use in the fresh mushroom category and will continue to produce and market its value-added Denny branded products. Libstar expects to report a loss on sale before tax of its mushroom operations in the annual financial results for the year ended 31 December 2025 of between R45 million and R55 million.

Special purpose vehicle Sustent Holdings, backed by funds managed by Mergence Investment Managers and Creation Capital, has made an offer to shareholders to acquire and delist Mahube Infrastructure. For shareholders of this illiquid stock, which trades at c.40% discount to its NAV, it provides an exit. Shareholders can decide to remain in the unlisted entity or accept the R5.50 offer per share. As a delisted entity, Mahube could be positioned as a player for private equity investments in large-scale infrastructure assets in South Africa.

In a move to monetise its infrastructure assets, BHP has agreed to a deal which will see Global Infrastructure Partners (BlackRock) take a 49% stake in BHP’s Western Australian Iron Ore (WAIO)’s inland power network. GIP will provide US$2 billion in funding for the stake. BHP will pay the entity a tariff linked to BHP’s share of WAIO’s inland power over a 25-year period.

The finalisation of the take-private of Curro by the Jannie Mouton Stigting remains subject to the fulfilment of certain suspensive conditions. The parties are waiting for confirmation of the dates of the Tribunal’s approval process.

This week both Anglo American and Teck shareholders voted in favour of the proposed merger. The completion of the merger remains subject to a number of regulatory approvals.

Lead investor Secha Capital in conjunction with 27four and Shade Tree Capital have invested into Barracuda Holdings, a South African electronics manufacturing services business. The new partnership will position Barracuda for its next growth phase. Financial details were not disclosed.

VEA Capital Partners, a private-investment company, has announced a strategic partnership with Freedom of Movement, the local lifestyle brand known for its leather goods, apparel and accessories. The alliance will scale the brand’s retail footprint, strengthen manufacturing capacity and introduce new product categories. Financial details of the transaction were undisclosed.

Weekly corporate finance activity by SA exchange-listed companies

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British American Tobacco (BAT) raised c.£315 million from the sale of 187,5 million ITC Hotels shares (9% stake) in an accelerated bookbuild. The proceeds will be used to reduce debt. Following the transaction, BAT retains a 6.3% shareholding in ITC Hotels.

Store-Age Property REIT has successfully closed its equity raise of R500 million in an accelerated bookbuild which was three times oversubscribed. 27,932,961 new shares were placed at an issue price of R17.90 per share. The issue price represents a discount of 0.7% to the 30-day VWAP as at 4 December 2025. The proceeds of the equity raise will be applied to support the company’s 2030 Property Strategy

Datatec will issue 4,197,683 shares to shareholders receiving the scrip dividend option in lieu of a final cash dividend, resulting in a capitalisation of the distributable retained profits in the company of R300,16 million.

Copper 360 has raised R400 million with 329,315,130 claw-back and rights offer shares subscribed for, representing 63.3% of the Rights Offer. The underwriters picked up the slack ensuring a successful raise.
Confirmation of the successful Squeeze-Out by Canal+ of the remaining ordinary shares in MultiChoice paved the way for its delisting from the JSE and A2x on 10 December 2025.

Safari Investments RSA will implement its Clean Out Distribution of R6.18 per share on 19 December, following which the company will delist from the JSE on 23 December 2025.

Conduit Capital which has been suspended from trading for more than three years will have its listing removed by the JSE on 19 December 2025. Shareholders will remain invested in an unlisted company.
This week the following companies announced the repurchase of shares:

During the period 29 September to 9 December 2025, Hosken Consolidated Investments repurchased 4,862,760 shares at an average price of R133.11 for a total of R647,26 million. The repurchase was funded from available cash resources and shares will be held as treasury shares.

Investec Ltd has announced it will repurchase some of the non-redeemable, non-cumulative, non-participating preference shares. The repurchase will commence on 11 December 2023 with shares repurchased cancelled, reverting back to an authorised but unissued share capital status.

On March 6, 2025, Ninety One plc announced that it would undertake a repurchase programme of up to £30 million. The shares will be purchased on the open market and cancelled to reduce the Company’s ordinary share capital. This week the company repurchased a further 288,965 ordinary shares at an average price 208 pence for an aggregate £602,132.

In October 2024, Anheuser-Busch InBev announced a US$2 billion share buy-back programme to be executed within the next 12 months which will result in the repurchase of c.31,7 million shares. 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 1 to 5 December 2025, the group repurchased 1,155,247 shares for €61,37 million.

On 19 February 2025, Glencore announced the commencement of a new US$1 billion share buyback programme, with the intended completion by the time of the Group’s interim results announcement in August 2025. This week the company repurchased 6,400,000 shares at an average price per share of £3.76 for an aggregate £24,08 million.

South32 continued with its US$200 million repurchase programme announced in August 2024. The shares will be repurchased over the period 12 September 2025 to 11 September 2026. This week 1,050,115 shares were repurchased for an aggregate cost of A$3,63 million.

In May 2025, British American Tobacco (BAT) extended its share buyback programme by a further £200 million, taking the total amount to be repurchased by 31 December 2025 to £1,1 billion. In a trading update this week BAT increased the buy-back programme by a further £1.3 billion for 2026. The shares will be cancelled. This week the company repurchased a further 522,749 shares at an average price of £42.31 per share for an aggregate £2,25 million.

During the period 1 to 5 December 2025, Prosus repurchased a further 2,668,285 Prosus shares for an aggregate €140,68 million and Naspers, a further 870,370 Naspers shares for a total consideration of R925,85 million.

Three companies issued or withdrew a cautionary notice: RMH, Mahube Infrastructure and Libstar.

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

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Frigoglass Group has entered into an agreement to sell its entire shareholding in Frigoinvest Nigeria Holdings B.V., the holding company of its Nigerian Glass business (including Beta Glass plc and Frigoglass Industries Nigeria Limited), which comprise the Group’s glass container, plastic crates, and metal crowns manufacturing activities for a consideration of up to €100 million, to Helios Investment Partners. The transaction is subject to regulatory approval and expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2026.

Safaricom Plc announced the results of its Tranche 1 Note issue under its Medium Term Programme of up to KES40 billion. The teleco had looked to raise KES15 billion in this first tranche, but the offer achieved a 275.7% subscription rate. Due to the strong market reaction to the offer, Safaricom exercised the KES5 billion greenshoe option, thereby increasing Tranche 1 to KES20 billion.

Helios Investment Partners and Fipar-Holding, a subsidiary of CDG Invest, announced the creation of 3MDC, a new digital infrastructure platform. The platform aims to accelerate Morocco’s digital transformation and strengthen its position as a regional technology hub. The new platform brings together Maroc Datacenter (MDC), Munisys, and Medasys, three of Morocco’s most established players in cloud, data, cybersecurity and digital services. Their combination creates a unique, fully integrated hybrid-cloud platform serving enterprise and public-sector clients across Morocco and Southern Europe.

Sahel Capital’s Social Enterprise Fund for Agriculture in Africa (SEFAA) has approved an additional US$800,000 financing facility for Benin’s MM LEKKER. This follows a first US$400,000 working capital loan provided in March. Headquartered in Abomey-Calavi, MM Lekker plays a pivotal role in transforming the regional agricultural trade landscape. The company specializes in sourcing and selling soybeans, shea nuts, and cashew nuts to both local and international markets.

Eos Capital announced the successful exit of Allegrow Fund’s investment in Erongo Medical Group (EMG). The exit represents Eos Capital’s first realised exit since inception.

Standard Bank has partnered with Safaricom Telecommunications, Kenya’s largest telecommunications provider, to provide funding of US$138 million as part of investment towards Safaricom Telecommunications Ethiopia PLC. The financing facilitates Safaricom’s ongoing rollout of digital infrastructure and services in Ethiopia.

Crown Healthcare, a Kenyan medical products distributor, has secured a US$10 million investment from Impact Fund Denmark. Founded in 1998, Crown Healthcare has evolved from a medical devices distributor into a comprehensive healthcare solutions provider with operations spanning Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, and Rwanda. The investment will accelerate Crown Healthcare’s plans for a pharmaceutical manufacturing facility at Tatu City in Kiambu, where the company has committed a total of $40 million to build what it describes as the largest pharmaceutical plant and medical devices manufacturing facility in sub-Saharan Africa. The plant will span 10 acres with a building area of 400,000 square feet and is expected to employ more than 1,000 highly qualified professionals when fully operational.

TotalEnergies has concluded an agreement with Galp to enter as operator in the prolific PEL 83 license, including the Mopane discovery. Under the agreement, TotalEnergies will acquire a 40% operated interest in PEL83 license holding the Mopane discovery, while Galp will acquire a 10% participating interest in PEL56, which includes the Venus discovery, and a 9.39% participating interest in PEL91. TotalEnergies will carry 50% of Galp’s capital expenditures for the exploration and appraisal of the Mopane discovery and the first development on PEL83. The carry will be repaid through 50% of Galp’s future cash flows from the project.

AJN Resources announced that it has entered into a non-binding term sheet with Amani Consulting SARL, Giro Goldfields SARL and Mabanga Mining SARL pursuant to which AJN can acquire a 55% indirect interest in the Giro Gold Project which comprises two exploitation permits, PE 5046 and PE 5049, that cover a surface area of about 497km² and lies within the Kilo Moto Greenstone Belt in the Haute-Uele Province in the north-east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), about 35km west of the Kibali Mine. The deal will be concluded through the issuance of 250,000,000 common AJN shares to Amani Consulting. AJN will be granted an option to acquire the remaining 10% interest held by Amani Consulting in Giro Goldfields by either paying US$30 million to Amani Consulting within 12 months of the Closing or paying $50 million to Amani Consulting within 24 months of the Closing.

Blank shares and board powers

NAVIGATING SECTION 36(1)(d) OF THE COMPANIES ACT

In terms of section 36(1)(d) of the Companies Act, No 71 of 2008 (Companies Act), the creation of “blank shares” in a company’s memorandum of incorporation (MOI) is not unusual. However, practical and legal uncertainties often arise in respect of the timing of the determination of the associated preferences, rights, limitations or other terms of those shares, the issuance of the shares, and the filing of the amendment to the MOI with the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC).

S36(1)(d) of the Companies Act provides that the MOI may set out a class of shares which does not specify the associated preferences, rights, limitations or other terms of that class (Share Terms). The section empowers the board of the company to determine the Share Terms, and states that the shares must not be issued until the board has made such determination.

In terms of s36(4), if the board acts in terms of s36(1)(d), it is required to file a Notice of Amendment of its MOI with CIPC, which sets out the changes effected by the board (Board Amendment Notice). We also see that this constitutes an amendment of the MOI by the board in s16(1)(b) of the Companies Act.

An amendment to a MOI, as set out in s16(9)(b) of the Companies Act, takes effect (i) 10 business days after receipt of the Notice of Amendment by CIPC, unless endorsed or rejected with reasons by CIPC prior to the expiry of such period; or (ii) such later date, if any, as set out in the Notice.

Once a board has determined the Share Terms, the question often arises as to when such shares can be issued. Given that the most common habitat in which blank shares are encountered is the preference share funding environment, more often than not, time is of the absolute essence, and every day counts. Particularly, the question is whether:–

• these shares can only be validly issued after the Board Amendment Notice has been “registered” by CIPC; or

• the company is able to proceed forthwith with the issuance of the shares after the board resolution has been passed, and only thereafter file the Board Amendment Notice with CIPC.

The question has become even more important and relevant pursuant to the Companies Act amendments which took effect in December last year. Those amendments effectively clarify that CIPC performs a similar reviewing and registration role which it had under the previous Companies Act – it now has 10 business days within which to accept or reject the resolution. A rejection can sometimes occur on extremely technical, administrative grounds, or due to an inadvertent mismatch between the company’s and CIPC’s respective records of what the share capital of the company is (there could be historical issues in this regard). This makes it vitally important to know when exactly the parties can go ahead and close the section 36(1)(d) issuance.

The Companies Act is regrettably ambiguous when it comes to addressing this question. A strong argument exists that the company is able to issue the shares once the Share Terms have been determined by the board, with an ex post facto CIPC filing. This argument is based on the grounds discussed below.

S16(9)(b)(i) of the Companies Act refers to an amendment of a company’s MOI taking effect “after receipt of the Notice”. Considering s16 of the Companies Act as a whole, we note the Notice of Amendment is referred to in s16(7) and 16(9) only. S16(7)(b) of the Companies Act refers to the filing of a Notice of Amendment if a new MOI will substitute the existing MOI in terms of s16(5)(a), or the existing MOI is altered in terms of s16(5)(b). When we consider s16(5), we see that this section refers to amendments that were effected under s16(1)(c), which requires a special resolution of the shareholders, and not s16(1)(b), which deals with a board amendment. Consequently, s16 does not deal with the filing of the Board Amendment Notice where the MOI was amended by way of board resolution. Thus, a textual argument (albeit a tenuous one) may be made that (i) s16(9) only deals with the filing of a Notice of Amendment for amendments in terms of s16(1)(c) (special resolutions of shareholders), and that (ii) s36(4) is a different procedure that applies for amendments by the board as contemplated in s36(3).

Consideration of the language in s36(4) of the Companies Act, specifically that the Board Amendment Notice must set out “the changes effected by the board, implies that once the board resolution to determine the Share Terms is passed, the changes to the MOI are in law, “effected”. Therefore, the filing of the Board Amendment Notice is merely a formality for record purposes – much like the return a company files with CIPC, recording changes to its directorship. From a contextual and purposive perspective, this interpretation is also logical as the board’s powers are limited to an amendment which relates only to share capital, with one of the obvious purposes of enabling the company to raise equity finance. Companies would normally require equity finance to be raised as quickly as possible, and without being delayed by CIPC’s processes. Therefore, given the context and purpose of s36(3) of the Companies Act, it is sensible and businesslike to interpret s36(4) as allowing the board to issue shares immediately upon determining the Share Terms.

The point above also garners support from s36(1)(d)(iii) of the Companies Act, which prohibits the issuance of the shares until the board has determined the Share Terms. This section does not require that the determination by the board be filed with CIPC and, thus, the only requirement prior to issuance of these shares is that the Share Terms be determined by the board.

However, it must be noted that regulation 15(3) of the Companies Regulations, 2011 requires the Notice to be filed together with any required supporting documentation and the filing fee within 10 business days after an amendment to the MOI has been effected in any manner contemplated in s16(1) of the Companies Act. As this regulation covers s16(1)(b) as well, the Notice with the board resolution which determines the Share Terms should be filed with CIPC within the prescribed time period.

S36(1)(d) of the Companies Act has given companies the flexibility to create “blank shares”. However, the Companies Act remains ambiguous with regard to the timing of the determination of the Share Terms, the issuance of the shares, and the filing of the MOI amendment with CIPC. While a strong case exists for the issuance of the shares the moment that the board determines the Share Terms, to mitigate any potential legal and compliance risks, we recommend that companies proceed with caution and only issue such shares after they have “registered” the board resolution with CIPC. Alternatively, if the parties really cannot wait, then the special resolution of the shareholders approving the initial MOI amendment should, in anticipation, include a specific reference to s38(2) which allows the retroactive authorisation of shares that were issued before their creation in law.

Ian Hayes is Practice Head and Storm Arends is an Associate in Corporate & Commercial | Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr

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

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