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Ghost Stories #100: Mining through the cycle – Sibanye-Stillwater’s strategy

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Sibanye-Stillwater CEO Richard Stewart has stepped into the top job at a time when the company is printing money in its gold and PGM operations. But success during the favourable times in the cycle is driven by what a mining company does through the cycle.

From cost control measures through to strategic commodity investments, there are many strategies that Sibanye-Stillwater uses to create long-term shareholder value. In this excellent discussion, Richard gives us deeper insights into the operating environment and how the group positions itself over time.

This podcast deals with topics like:

  • The reality behind Sibanye’s surge in EBITDA
  • How the gold and PGM portfolios are structured (and why it matters)
  • Synergies from consolidation and the economics of contiguous mining assets
  • The shift from deep-level to shallow gold operations and what it means for margins
  • Cost management, AISC, and building resilience through the cycle
  • Mechanisation strategy in the US and its impact on productivity and costs
  • Section 45X credits and the geopolitics of critical minerals
  • South Africa’s “green shoots” vs persistent structural challenges
  • Sibanye’s lithium strategy and positioning in EV supply chains
  • The growing importance of recycling as a stabiliser in volatile markets
  • Oil price impacts: what matters, what doesn’t, and what to watch
  • The one factor that keeps the CEO up at night (hint: it’s not commodity prices)

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

Full transcript:

The Finance Ghost: Welcome to this episode of the Ghost Stories podcast, after a bit of a break during what I’ve come to call “December-Lite” in South Africa, which is April and all its associated public holidays.

And what a way to get back into the swing of things, because we are here with Sibanye-Stillwater, fresh off an operating update for the quarter ended March, that reflects a 371% increase in group EBITDA. How’s that for a percentage? When times are good in mining, they are really, really good.

And you can go and dig into all of the details of that operating update on SENS, or of course you can read about it in Ghost Bites.

We’re not here to rehash the numbers today. Instead, we are going to be enhancing your understanding of this group by digging into the key concepts that drive the numbers.

And who better to do it with than the group CEO, Richard Stewart?

Richard, you’ve been in the role for a good few months now — actually, it’s almost a year, I think? And thank you for doing this with me and for bringing these additional insights into the group to the Ghost Mail audience.

Richard Stewart: Ghost, thank you very much. Good to be here. I’ve actually been in the role for six months, so it’s long enough to be settled in, but it’s gone very quickly, and it’s very exciting to be here. Thanks so much for the opportunity.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah. What a time to join. Is this something you do historically? You join at the best point in the cycle in all your prior roles? It’s amazing to see the numbers. [Laughs]. It’s incredible.

Richard Stewart: Yeah. I think with mining it clearly is one of those industries that’s very exposed to cycles. It obviously drives the bottom line. We are price takers in the short term.

It’s nice to be at a point in the cycle like this, where one of your concerns, which is profitability and making money, is made easier with where the prices are. But as always, I think it’s about making these businesses sustainable through cycles, and those focuses, those efforts, those concerns are always there. So that’s where the major effort is at the moment.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, absolutely. Well, congrats nonetheless on such a cool set of numbers, and for acknowledging right up front that a lot of this is, of course, the external pricing factors. Your job is to make sure that this business, as you say, is sustainable through cycles. That’s how mining works.

But before we get into the details around Sibanye, I’m just keen to get a temperature gauge on how it’s looking from an on-the-ground perspective in South Africa, because there is obviously much more positive sentiment at the moment. Well, I say “obviously”, that’s certainly my perception – that seems to be the story.

That’s what I wanted to ask you. What feedback are you getting from global investors, from funders, from partners – about the Southern African exposure, specifically the South African exposure that Sibanye has? Obviously, the majority of listeners to this podcast will probably be South African, and it’s always good to see what your perception is on the ground.

Richard Stewart: I think there are probably multiple aspects to that question. I think we can look at it on an absolute basis and what we’re seeing happening in South Africa at the moment. And you can also look at it on a relative basis.

When we look at South Africa over the last couple of years, I would certainly say that there have been some real green shoots. Whether we consider that from an energy perspective, we’ve seen Eskom stabilise, we’ve seen our load shedding dropping. But then we’ve still got some challenges with the cost of power coming up.

We look at logistics and transport, which is another big one for business.

We’ve almost seen the arrest in the decline of that particular sector. It certainly seems to be turning around, and there are lots of green shoots, but a long way to go and a lot of capital that still needs to be invested.

If we look at crime and corruption, again, I think we’ve seen some positive steps in the right direction. We’ve seen South Africa coming off the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) grey list. That’s got a big positive for cost of capital and investors looking forward. But then I would dare say crime is probably one of the biggest concerns I have in terms of operating on the ground.

So I definitely think we’ve seen some real green shoots and positive moves, but we’ve still got a long way to go. Overall, the GNU has been a critical part of moving forward, and part of why I say that is, to me, a lot of the success and green shoots we’ve seen are stakeholders working closely together, particularly the private sector and government, in terms of solving these problems.

And the more we can continue down that route, of being seen as partners and stakeholders to move forward, as opposed to almost necessary evils, I think we can do a lot more on that front.

I think there is a lot of positive, but a lot to be done.

Now, on a relative basis, that also gets interesting. The world has changed. With the geopolitical tensions, with what we refer to as multipolarity, it’s no longer a global village. The way the world and investors view risk is different.

You’re having to look at the world through a metals or mining focus. Critical minerals needed for defence or energy or technology today – have become a big strategic imperative for many governments and therefore many investors.

And that means they are looking towards different – and what were historically considered as riskier jurisdictions.

So, in that regard, on a relative basis, the rest of the world’s got riskier. South Africa has remained flat, and we’ve got a lot of what the world needs. So, on a relative basis, we’ve become more attractive as well. So I think it’s both absolute and relative.

In terms of boots on the ground, I would say, as I mentioned, crime actually is one of the most difficult things we’re dealing with, especially in mining. High commodity prices bring out illegal mining. And we aren’t seeing the rule of law on the ground being implemented to the extent it needs to be.

So that is still a real challenge, not only to our business, but of course to our employees, to the communities around us. So, if there was one that sort of stands out for me, it’s that.

And then the other one is service delivery. We still operate directly in communities. We are very integrated into those communities. We play a significant role in the sustainability of those communities. And the less that gets delivered by the institutions that are supposed to deliver it, the increased pressure that puts on the private sector and mining in particular.

So that remains a real challenge.

But overall, for us, South Africa is, as you mentioned, 80% of our business today. Of course, we’d like to see our business grow globally and that’s part of it, but it’s not to get out of South Africa. We are still comfortable investing here. That’s where we come from.

Ultimately, if we want to be successful anywhere in the world, we’ve first got to successful at home. That’s a motto we stand by. Making sure South Africa is a success – if we are successful here, that’s key to the way we think.

The Finance Ghost: It’s kind of funny to be able to move the conversation from “is there power?” through to stuff like “cost of power” – and it sounds ridiculous, but that’s progress.

Because if we were having this conversation a couple of years ago, we would have been talking about whether there is power at all, as opposed to how much it costs, for example.

And as you’ve highlighted, there’s still lots of things we need to do better as a country. And this is what directly drives the cost of capital. This is the relative risk point.

And I love that you’ve brought up the change in, as you say, it’s not really a global village anymore. I think that’s exactly right. We’ve seen these big isolationist policies out of the US now, and it changes the game.

South Africa is not badly positioned for this at all. I mean, I’m certainly not going anywhere. I love living here, and I think it’s in the best shape it’s been for a long time. But as you say, there’s lots that we need to get right.

And Southern Africa – South Africa specifically – is still the biggest part of your business, as you say.

That leads me then into the next thing I wanted to ask you, which is: as investors, when we read about Sibanye, we see these big buckets. It’s Southern African PGMs, it’s Southern African gold, and there are some eye-watering numbers there, these days in particular, both making a whole lot of money.

But I’m not sure that there’s a particularly broad understanding out there of what sits inside those buckets. So obviously investors read these headline numbers and then they’ll see mention made of specific mines, for example.

But perhaps you could just give us a lay of the land, specifically focusing on South Africa, of just how many different mining operations sit inside the gold bucket and the PGM bucket locally. What’s actually in there?

Richard Stewart: Ghost, that’s a great question. I think to answer it I’m actually going to go back a little bit in the history of the company, because it’s not just about how many mines we’ve got, but how we built the company over the years and how that all contributes.

We are, in mining terms, a relatively young company. We were formed in 2013, and we actually started off, for anybody who doesn’t know, as an unbundling from Gold Fields. So Gold Fields had three assets in South Africa which they wanted to divest of. Those were unbundled, and that became the start of Sibanye. That’s where we were born.

Those three mines are called Kloof, Beatrix and Driefontein, and they are what I would call classic South African deep-level gold mines. So, they employ a lot of people. They are deep level, they are generally quite high-cost relative to others around the world, but also quite high grade and long life. So that formed the core of our business.

To unpack what you’re saying, if we talk SA gold, over the years we’ve also invested quite significantly into a company called DRDGOLD. And for those who follow that, they’re separately listed; we’re a 51% shareholder. They actually mine surface operations, or tailings dams.

A big rationale of doing that transaction was, as a big historical mining company, we’ve got 40 to 50 years’ worth of tailings within our company. By combining the two entities, we’ve been able to take what was a historical environmental liability to us, merge it into DRDGOLD for real value, and they will continue mining that for many years to come.

And then over the years we’ve also added on some shallow projects onto that. People will hear us referring to our Burnstone project, for example, or some projects we have in the Free State.

The core of the company was started on the three deep-level gold mines – Kloof, Beatrix and Driefontein – and subsequently we’ve added on these shallower assets.

So, from a gold perspective, and almost a strategic perspective, if I could call it that, what we have today is our gold business is predominantly the three deep-level gold mines. But over time we will look to transition into more of a shallow business.

That’s the gold portfolio.

We then moved into PGMs in about 2015, 2016, and we very intentionally looked to acquire PGM operations that were contiguous to each other, next to each other. And the reason for that is we could see a business model whereby putting different operations together, you can realise synergies – cost synergies from a management perspective, but also real operational synergy.

One of the things with mining is we often get constrained by the edges of mine boundaries. But if you can get rid of those mine boundaries, you can mine much more ground, much more efficiently. By buying different operations and putting them together, we were able to extract those.

If we talk about our SA PGM bucket, that actually historically consists of three companies. It was the Rustenburg operations that we acquired from Anglo Platinum – today Valterra, then Anglo Platinum. It was a company called Aquarius, who owned what we call the Kroondal operations, and they also had a 50% ownership in a mine in Zimbabwe. And then we bought the old Lonmin operations, which today we call Marikana.

Our SA PGM business, if we could call it that, is essentially historically three companies. We still refer to it as the three mines being Rustenburg, Kroondal and Marikana. But essentially that comprises almost 15 or 16 individual operating mines or shafts. It’s probably about half a dozen concentrators.

Importantly, what we also have is smelters and refineries. So, by putting those three together, we not only created a business of real scale, but it’s also a full mine-to-market business in that we mine and refine our own metal all the way through to market, and therefore have a sales component to it as well.

So, when we talk SA PGMs, that’s what we’re referring to – those consolidated historical three businesses. Which are one of the biggest PGM producers in the world, one of the biggest chrome producers in the world. So, it is a significant business all the way from mining to market.

And then gold is the historical three assets plus some new shallow projects.

And then internationally, just to sort of round out the portfolio at a very high level, we’ve got the US PGM operations – also underground, two mines – we’ve got a significant recycling business, three different operations there, and then lithium in Finland.

The Finance Ghost: It’s a fascinating backstory, right? A lot of deal-making, particularly by your predecessor, to cobble this thing together.

I guess, Richard, that leads to the cheeky question, which is: can we expect more of this kind of deal-making in years to come under your leadership at the group, or is the focus at the moment to make sure that, while the going is good with these commodity prices, you will be making sure you make as much money as humanly possible? [Laughs]. Shore up that balance sheet and prepare it for this next part of the cycle?

Richard Stewart: Your last statement there was actually probably the key one, in terms of shoring up the balance sheet and understanding cycles. Let me step back and say our strategy is very much around creating value.

What we need to look at as a mining company – of course you’re mining finite assets, so you always have to grow. And the ways to grow there are: you either start new mines, and that’s the whole exploration sort of game – identifying new ore bodies, creating new mines, building new mines.

That’s an example of what we’ve recently done in Finland with Keliber. That was a completely greenfields operation.

You can expand your existing operations, the so-called Brownfields projects, or of course you can do M&A and acquire.

We are open to looking at all three of those as part of what adds the most value to the business in the long term.

But our current strategy in the short term (and let me say that’s where our focus is: the strategy we shared with the market earlier this year) – and where we see our best value in the short term today – is more within the portfolio we have right now.

And what I mean by that is the organic investment, or the brownfields projects we can invest in, specifically in South Africa, is by far the best returns we can get. And the reason for that is we’ve got significant resources, we understand the risk, we’ve already got the human capital, it’s part of the existing infrastructure.

So, we’ve got the people, and of course we’ve got the infrastructure existing – whether that is the overhead infrastructure, the technical infrastructure, processing – so we don’t have to go and buy new mines. It’s very low risk; it’s off existing infrastructure. These are some of the lowest capital intensity projects in the PGM business. They’re shallow, they’re positive for our cost profile.

So, without a doubt that’s where we see the best investment value for us in the short term.

The other part of the strategy that’s critical, though, is making sure we run our current operations as effectively as we can. And simply put, that is maximising our margins out of our existing operations, and that is to address our balance sheet.

Our balance sheet at the moment – we did stretch that for a lot of the historical mergers and acquisitions (M&A) you referred to. We’re in a good position from a leverage perspective with the earnings we’ve got today. I’m sleeping well, I’m not concerned about it.

But mining is cyclical, and what you do want is the ability to be able to move in those down-cycle times. That’s where the real opportunities present themselves.

Our strategy is very much focused on maximising our current operations to maximise margins and de-gear the business even further, get that leverage down.

And then the second portion is: where do we see the best investment today? Well, that’s largely in our own operations.

Would M&A be part of the future? Listen, I think it would. It’s something we’re good at, it’s something we’ve done successfully in the past. But I would also say so would building new projects, especially when you’re looking at critical minerals – a lot of that will be new as well. So, I think it’s more a value question than a set formula we’ll be following.

The Finance Ghost: Makes a world of sense from start to finish. And of course, the one cool thing with M&A in the space, as you’ve raised there, is the synergies can be real when these mines are contiguous (that’s the official word – next to each other, essentially). And that makes sense. Physically, you can see why that makes sense.

You don’t need to imagine too much fancy footwork on a PowerPoint presentation to justify those synergies. It’s just logical – and that helps the M&A story.

I guess on the ongoing management of the business for value, as you say, something I picked up in the operating update – and you mentioned it in the gold story now as well – is how historically it’s very much underground operations. There’s a move towards more shallow operations.

I understand that the margins are better, I guess because you are just getting the gold closer to the surface. I mean, I’m not a mining guy, but that feels logical to me. So I guess I wanted to confirm that.

And also, just a broader question, which I was going to ask you later but I think now is perhaps the time, which is just around the all-in sustaining costs (AISC) – that metric that investors need to always look at.

Some of the things you can do to just manage costs and I don’t mean like energy spikes (I want to ask you about that separately, the oil price) – I mean a longer-term view on how you manage costs here. How you actually keep those margins as high as possible, the life of mine.

So just talk to us a bit about that, and as I say, the margins on the shallow side in the gold business, and how that will change.

Richard Stewart: Just to put some numbers to this – it wasn’t directly your question, but I will come to that in a second. So just to talk the synergies, as an example: when we put those three businesses together in the PGM industry, we were able to (within 18 months) take out R2 billion worth a year just in overhead operating costs. That’s the kind of number. Now put that over a 10-year period – that’s significant.

And in fact, a lot of those businesses, at low prices, were struggling to sustain themselves at the time. But just with those synergies, that’s what kept them afloat.

What we’re doing now, by dropping the mine boundaries and investing in the new resources, is this adds 20 years onto these lives. Now, outside of the economic benefit, of course, to shareholders, the impact (of extending the lives of these operations by 20 years) to employees, to governments, to communities, etc., is huge.

So that’s the real benefit that comes from realising these synergies. So just to put a bit of meat on the bones there – but I agree with you 100%.

On the gold side, if I unpack that a little bit: of our three historical operations – and there’s still a lot of value to come from those, I must be clear – but two of them have got lives of less than five years, and those operations are currently running at costs in the region of $2,500 to $3,000 an ounce.

And the reason for that is, these are deep-level operations that today are probably mining at a fraction of what the original design capacity was. But we are still needing to cover the costs for all the deep-level infrastructure. Whether you are cooling operations for one stope or ten stopes, you’re still cooling operations [Laughs].

So, they have a very high fixed cost component to them.

And our third operation has got about 10 years; that’s running at also sort of low $2,000 per ounce numbers. So, at current gold prices, they have great margins, they’re doing exceptionally well.

But of course, what is your long-term view? And if we look through-cycle back to means, there’s a bit of risk there.

The surface businesses, of course, have a much lower fixed cost. So those tend to be sub-$2,000 per ounce. So, you’re looking at anywhere between a $500 and $1,000 per ounce difference in that total margin.

And when we refer to an all-in sustaining cost, that is effectively a cost number we use; that is all costs outside of growth. So, if you’re putting extra money in for growth, then of course that’s different. But anything to sustain the current operations is what we refer to as an all-in sustaining cost number.

So, it’s a pretty good number to look at for an overall all-in margin that can be generated.

But those are the sort of differences we’re looking at. So dropping from a $2,500 to a $3,000 per ounce conventional deep-level business, down to a $2,000 per ounce shallower but higher-margin business.

And those businesses, for us, as I mentioned, because we’ve got 40 years of tailings, these are operations with long life.

So, over the next five to ten years, we’ll see the total underground portion and the deep-level portion coming off, while the surface portion, we’ll be investing in – and that comes up. So that’s that transition we talk about, from a higher-cost to a lower-cost, higher-margin aspect.

And we’d like to see our gold business grow, so we would like to see more gold in the portfolio. But now is not a time to be looking at gold acquisitions or markets, given where the current price is.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, absolutely. In mining you want to buy when no one wants the stuff, right? That’s the trick. And everyone wants gold at the moment, no doubt about it.

Perhaps then just sticking with some of the cost stuff and moving on to the Stillwater side over in the US. A lot of people, I’m also often guilty of it, I just shorten the name to Sibanye. But of course, it is Sibanye-Stillwater.

The side of the business that had to deal with all that flooding a few years ago – where the jokes unfortunately did write themselves for me. I’m glad that things are looking better on that side, swung into profits now in the latest period, which is lovely.

And there I noticed that there’s a mechanisation project. So I guess this talks to costs again, but I imagine that is at least partially because the US is just a structurally more expensive labour market than South Africa. Is that the right take on why that type of work is happening there, or are there other reasons for mechanisation projects in that business specifically?

Richard Stewart: So, Ghost, it’s a combination of things. The first thing you’ve got to look at with any mining method is how do you most effectively and efficiently extract the ore body that you have.

In South Africa, we have got quite unique ore bodies that we call tabular ore bodies. So, they’re very flat, they’re quite thin or narrow, and they extend for several kilometres. That’s both our gold and our PGM operations.

And those are actually quite difficult to mechanise. Hence the reason we still have very labour-intensive operations in South Africa. Which, frankly for South Africa is a good thing. We need the jobs – we are very pro that – so that’s good.

Whereas the ore body we are mining in the US is far more vertical and therefore lends itself to mechanisation.

So that’s the first point. You do need a technical environment, and that environment does lend itself to it.

But what we are doing now – and you’re 100% correct – the labour factor in the US is definitely a significant factor. So, labour costs are high. In Montana, I speak under correction, but the last unemployment figures I got were less than 3%. So, there’s very high demand for skills.

And of course, mining is one of those industries where we are still needing to attract skills into it, compared to many others.

So, labour costs are definitely a factor. And therefore, one of the things you want to drive at a mine in the US is how many ounces per person can you extract most effectively [Laughs].

And essentially what our strategy there looks at, without going into all of the technical detail, is we historically looked at saying: how do you mine according to the highest grade, which means you mine the lowest volume but for the most metal? And that was the theory on how we built our mining method.

What we’ve recognised now, what this new strategy adopts, is to say: we’re actually quite happy to dilute our mining grade a little bit. So, we’ll mine a little bit more (tonnes) for the same amount of metal but do it a lot more effectively and a lot cheaper.

So, by going to higher mechanisation, we effectively end up mining more per person – possibly a little bit more rock that comes out for the same amount of metal – but a lot more effectively.

And the net result of all of that is, with the same amount of people, we believe we can get 40% more metal at 20% less unit costs.

So that’s how all the maths comes together, to say actually diluting it a bit, but diluting it and getting mining per tonne a lot cheaper, actually benefits the per-ounce metal number more effectively.

So that is what the US is about. It’s about looking at the ore body we’ve got, and through this process we’ll get 40% more metal for 20% less cost, with the same amount of people effectively.

And why that is so important to us in the US, Ghost – if I could just unpack strategically for a second – is US operations today are mining at a total cost of about $1,300 per ounce.

Now when we look at the PGM basket price that they’re exposed to, we think a low point in the cycle, if you look through it sustainably, it will be very difficult to sustain a low point below $1,000.

So, we very specifically looked at it to say: if we can get our costs down to $1,000, then this operation will survive any low cycles.

But what’s beautiful about the Stillwater operations is they’ve got 40 years, officially, of life – and double that in stuff we haven’t yet even explored. So, this is a potential hundred-year mine that’s still to come.

So, our strategy is about saying: let’s make absolutely sure that we’re resilient to whatever the market throws at us. And then that will give us huge optionality during the upcycles.

And that, to your opening comments up front [laughs] – mining companies make money when cycles go up, and our job is really to make sure we survive when they go down. And that’s precisely what the strategy is all about.

The Finance Ghost: It looks easy at the top of the cycle. But a lot of stuff has to happen to make it look easy at the top of the cycle. I wish I understood more about the geological side sometimes when I read mining updates, but that was very cool – the different shape of the ore bodies and everything else. Thank you. I enjoyed that.

Something that I also want to touch on, that is relevant to your US business, is the Section 45X credits. And that comes through a lot in your financials, essentially, and in the narrative.

I think let’s just spend a couple of minutes on what that is, so that when investors actually see that, they understand what they’re reading about.

Richard Stewart: Ghost, perfect. And again, I’m going to answer that in two parts, because there’s a numbers piece to this which I’m sure many investors are interested in. But there’s a far more strategic piece to this as well.

Let me maybe give you the easy answer on the numbers. So, simply put, what Section 45X is: it’s an instrument that’s been introduced to support mining of critical metals in the US.

Very basically, what it is, is we get back a 10% tax credit on our total costs. So essentially it takes 10% off our cost base. Initially, that’s designed to be a cash back to us, so it’s actually cash that we get back.

It evolves into more of a tax credit moving forward, but actually a tax credit that’s tradable. So, to look at it in very simple terms, whatever our costs are, we get a 10% credit off those costs through 45X. That’s what it is.

How it works is it will run out, at the moment, into the early 2030s. I can get the exact date (it’s certainly disclosed in our numbers) and then it starts getting tapered down over a period of, I think, three years to about 2035 or so. [Editor’s note: s45X credits apply from 2023 to 2034, with 25% annual step-down commencing from 2031]

So, it’s an instrument that’s not evergreen, but it’s been put in place for a period of time specifically to help benefit operations targeting critical minerals. That is what it is from a numbers perspective.

The almost slightly deeper question, and what’s been so critical about that, is if looking at the history of 45X. And this came about through us actually directly engaging with the US government through various departments. Essentially the discussion we were having with them was to say Stillwater is a very strategic asset to North America.

And the reason is, if you look at platinum group metal mining, it all comes out of South Africa, Zimbabwe and Russia. The only asset of any significance is Stillwater in the US, and therefore, strategically it’s important.

But the costs of mining there are much higher than any of those other jurisdictions. As we’ve just been unpacking, labour costs, environmental costs, social costs – they’re much higher.

And our argument was to say, if this is a strategic asset, we can’t ask our shareholders to foot that bill alone and try and compete against other assets in different jurisdictions that have a much lower cost structure. How can you assist? And this was one of the things that came out of that.

Going back to the discussion we were having earlier about a multipolar world, this is very much because in mining companies – what we’ve been saying – is, as a mining company, you’re currently competing in many parts of the world with, say, Eastern or Chinese capital. And their capital structures are very different. Their operating costs are very different.

How do we make ourselves competitive against these different supply chains?

And with the geopolitical tensions, with the multipolarity, we are seeing some governments recognising that ensuring that they have multiple sources of supply – not just completely dependent on China – is increasingly important. That has become a huge international, global strategy.

And this is one of the instruments that the US government, in particular, has employed to assist with that.

Now we’re discussing others with the US and EU. We’re discussing various mechanisms with the EU as it relates to our lithium project. But I think we’re going to see a lot more of this going forward.

And we need to. If we want to develop supply chains for Western markets, or just supply chains generally that are not dependent on one particular supplier – there are going to need to be these types of incentives and mechanisms to help ultimately balance the market.

And that 45X is one of those.

So, I think it’s a real indicator of the intention of the US government to develop those supply chains. And I dare say we’re going to see more of it developing elsewhere in the world, and we are playing an active role in trying to see them be developed.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah. So you went on about the early 2030s on those credits. Copilot tells me it’s a phased moving out of those credits, basically from 2030 to 2033. So that’s why there’s no specific date – it basically phases out over a few years. Very interesting, and something that will become relevant for sure in years to come.

I think let’s use that as our cue to move past gold and PGMs, which is obviously still the foundation of the business, and that’s why we’ve spent the majority of our time together on it. But there’s a lot more to Sibanye than just the gold and PGMs.

You recently held a capital markets day where you focused on the businesses beyond that space, which I think sends an important message to the markets – that this stuff does matter to your group.

And a feature of this latest operating update as well, is just the broad-based nature of the contributions to EBITDA. It’s no longer just, “gold and PGMs make all the money” and everything else is kind of like that weird person in the family, we don’t talk about them.

It’s not that – there are some good numbers down there. Obviously, the lithium side is still loss-making because it’s in development phase, and we can talk about that. But it’s good to see some earnings coming through and becoming bigger and bigger from the rest of the business.

So perhaps just to set the scene there, maybe you can just give us the quick helicopter view, just to remind people – life beyond PGMs and gold – and what is inside Sibanye, without going into massive detail on each one.

What will people find if they want to go digging in that capital markets day presentation?

Richard Stewart: Perfect, Ghost. And I think, so definitely, as you say, gold, PGMs, precious metals remain the underpin to the business, and will for a foreseeable period of time. The other big one is – let me start off with that – lithium in Finland, the Keliber project.

A quick step back on strategically how we got there: when we got into PGMs, we studied the markets, and of course the big driver of PGMs is automobiles.

This was back in 2015. We recognised that electrification of vehicles was something that was going to come. And admittedly, the only other person in the world at the time making this noise was Tesla – was Elon Musk. It was still before it had really taken off.

And we still believe that that’s a structural change that’s going to come. Many people try and make it as a trade-off between Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) versus Electric Vehicles (EV). We don’t quite see it that way. It’s more that all technologies are going to be needed and evolve with time.

But we saw the opportunity to expose ourselves to what was a very clear trend, by being able to provide our customers with the metals they needed for electrification, and therefore specifically the batteries. The real opportunity to be part of a growth cycle, or growth metal.

And the other part of it that we recognised was that if we wanted to be competitive, trying to provide Western supply chains would be where we could have a competitive advantage, given how established already Eastern and Chinese supply chains were.

So that was how we ended up with lithium.

And why Finland, or why Europe? Well, that is a big Western automobile supply chain, and we wanted to supply into it. So that’s what we’ve got there.

What’s unique about it is, we’ve got a mine, we’ve got a concentrator, and we have a lithium refinery.

Now to put that into perspective, less than 30% of global lithium refining capacity sits outside of China. This is the only mine-to-market project in Europe, and one of the very few refineries that sits outside China in Europe.

It’s a very unique project in being able to go from mining all the way to final product. Most of that supply chain relies on going through China at some point.

For us, it’s a very strategic project in that regard. And as people are trying to diversify their supply sources, I think it’s one that’s going to become valuable.

And as you quite rightly mentioned, we finished that build in the first quarter of this year and we are now busy starting the project up. So, mining has commenced. We’ll start with the concentrating later in the year.

So that’s what we’ve got there, and we look to start seeing first cash flows coming from that during the second half of this year.

And then the other part of the business that’s material is the recycling. This is also one which, I guess, is a little bit different for a mining company to have taken such a big step in recycling. We got our first taste of it through our Stillwater acquisition, but we’ve grown it substantially since then.

We are significant recyclers of PGMs. We are significant recyclers of precious metals, as well as some base metals. And we’re doing quite a lot of work on some other niche products.

But the reason why this is such an important aspect for us strategically, is that we do fully believe that looking forward 10–15 years, focusing just on traditional mining, I think you’re going to be missing out. It’s going to be about metal supply. And one of the most responsible ways to supply metals remains recycling – you should use what you’ve got above ground.

And for us, as opposed to seeing that as a threat to our business, we actually want to incorporate it as part of the business and part of how we supply metal.

So, mining will be a component – you’re always going to need primary mining – but to have that recycling as part of the business for us has been a real strategic imperative. And today I think we see the benefits of it in two ways.

Number one, as you quite rightly pointed out, it’s contributing close to 10% of our earnings now. That’s a nice diversification, because it’s more of a fixed-margin business. Unlike mining, where you’ve got fixed costs and therefore floating margins, this over here is much more of a fixed-margin business.

And then strategically, again, in the supply chains we’re operating in, it’s a neat way for governments to be able to get access metals they might not own in resources on the ground within their specific regions. And we can offer them those technical skills to be able to look at the recycling.

So that’s become a really, really valuable and strategic part of our business, which I dare say will see growth.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, that’s interesting. I’m so glad I asked that question, because again, I learned some stuff there, and I have no doubt that the listeners did as well.

So very much the future-focused part of the group then. And I think what differentiates Sibanye, certainly at the moment, from many of the other names in big mining, if I can call it that, is everyone seems to be chasing copper at the moment. Whereas you are doing things a little bit differently.

Which for me – and again, this is maybe not the most informed mining view, I definitely don’t claim to be an expert in this space – but when it feels like everyone is chasing the same asset, it always feels to me like the chances are very good that people are overpaying. Or maybe not doing the right deals, or whatever the case may be.

Whereas you’re doing other stuff. And it starts with decisions made a decade ago: to your point, around stuff like lithium, and understanding what happens in PGMs, then how do you position yourself for that down the line with electric vehicles, etc.

I tend to agree with you – I don’t think it’s ICE versus EV. I think it’s a little bit of both. I think hybrid is proving that.

And I would also say that companies that ignore the future – I mean, that’s what’s happened to the European automobile industry, right? They kind of ignored the threat from China, and here we are.

So, kudos to Sibanye for not ignoring these trends and these threats. I think it doesn’t help to put your head in the sand like an ostrich, that’s for sure.

One thing I just want to confirm, which was interesting there. So on the recycling side, when you talk about fixed margin – so it’s a less cyclical business – basically, if the prices of metals go down, then you’re bringing the stuff in for less than you would have before, and you’re getting it out and locking in that margin.

Is that kind of what you’re saying about the economics of that business? Because if that’s true, that’s a pretty interesting addition to the Sibanye suite.

When commodity prices are very high, it looks amazing, like it does now, but in a downswing, that recycling business becomes even more important, right?

Richard Stewart: That’s exactly what it is. And listen, it is a little bit more complex than that [laughs].

If we take, for example, PGM recycling, there’s a very distinct value chain to that. And certainly, a lot of catalytic collectors, as we call them, do that as a business. And therefore, when prices are high, they do collect a little bit more, and you see that sort of playing out in the market.

And then the other part to this – which is recycling – we’ve got some really big blue-chip companies who we recycle for. We don’t always disclose that because it is very strategic. But these are people who rely on our credibility, our responsible sourcing, and our ability to return metal to them, who are almost price-agnostic.

That’s part of their industrial chain, and we are part of getting some of that metal back and putting it back into their value chain for them, where those margins are consistent.

So, you’re absolutely correct. This is something where you look at much more of a fixed margin compared to mining. Of course, when prices are higher, the absolute amount on a fixed margin is more, but you don’t get that variability that you get with mining.

So, in high-price times it tends to form a slightly smaller component, but in lower-price times it can be a really nice cushion to the business for a form of stability and earnings.

Your basic premise is 100% correct. Yes.

The Finance Ghost: Okay, fantastic. I think let’s move on then. Some of the really near-term stuff as we start to bring this to a close.

And specifically, the oil price spike – this has certainly thrust electric vehicles back into the limelight, that’s for sure. But I think more importantly it must be having quite an impact on your production costs.

A lot of the updates that I read from the mining sector, the industrial sector: quite correctly, companies are talking about the impact of fuel on their mining costs. This is front of mind for all South Africans.

The question here is pretty simple. Number one, what impact does this oil price spike have on your business? And two, to what extent can you mitigate it? Have you got hedges in place? What can you actually do to bring that impact down?

Richard Stewart: For us the mitigation is actually a little bit tricky, and I need to unpack why that is. So, in fact, the direct impact to us is quite low. And I say that because we are a largely conventional mining operation. As the bulk for us, diesel as a direct cost is actually relatively low. We don’t have huge trucks that we’re moving around open pits and things like that. We are conventional, labour-intensive operations.

It’s a small portion of our total cost. The notion for us of hedging oil prices or diesel prices or something like that doesn’t have a significant impact on our business. So, unlike many of our big global international peers, that impact is actually quite small.

Of course, the bigger impact is the overall effect. So how does it impact goods, logistics, transport of goods, etc.? That hits us across multiple areas in the supply chain, but it’s more difficult to pinpoint or deal with. It’s an overall inflation problem, I guess, that everybody suffers. So that, we feel.

For us, the bigger question mark around it – and if I had to say, it’s an indirect hit – but the one we watch more closely is… let me just say firstly, I don’t think that this is going to be a big uplift for battery electric vehicles versus ICE vehicles. Everybody’s talking about it like that, but I think that’s a knee-jerk theoretical response.

The amount of time it takes for these supply chains to adapt – I don’t see that as a big risk now. If it happened for another 10 years, that’s a different discussion. But for what we’re seeing, no.

The Finance Ghost: I tend to agree, for what it’s worth. Absolutely.

Richard Stewart: I think the bigger impact that we would see is, if this continues long enough to result in a material impact to global growth (so let’s say we start seeing global recessions) that impact people’s buying ability for goods — and one of those goods is automobiles and cars. So that affects the demand for our key products.

So that, for us, is probably the single biggest factor I’m certainly watching carefully: how we see this playing out over a two- or three-year period on global economics and growth, more so than the short-term impact, which is actually relatively small.

The Finance Ghost: Yeah, that makes perfect sense. The world does not do well with oil above $100 a barrel, that’s for sure. So hopefully it goes back down. It usually does. May that happen again.

Last question, Richard – and this has been such a great conversation. Thank you.

What is keeping you up at night? If you could pinpoint one risk that you really focus on – it’s always a very tough question, because there are a lot of things that you would be worried about, obviously, in the role that you’re in and the huge responsibility it is.

But if there was one thing keeping you up at night, what would that be?

Richard Stewart: Let me not call it a risk, but let me call it the one thing that keeps me up at night, or always occupies my attention – and it’s actually safety.

And let me maybe just unpack why I say that. I mean clearly, as a mining business, safety is something that’s always critical to us. And the obvious thing is that’s the right thing to do for our employees. We want our employees to be able to go home safe, unharmed, every day. So that’s sort of the obvious reason.

The slightly less obvious reason for me is that safety is almost an indicator or a reflection of a broader culture within a company – how the company works, how it thinks, how effective it is.

So much of what drives a safe operation is also what drives an efficient operation. So much of how you treat and work with your employees and your communities around you is who you are as people, and how you engage with them is what makes an operation safe.

And I extend safety here beyond just your normal thinking of mine safety, but into our communities – into a lot of the crime that we’re facing at the moment. That’s our people being safe, feeling safe, coming to work and being able to work a day and go home again, and feel safe in their home environment.

So, I really think it’s a core aspect for me, just because it drives so much of the fundamental business and who we are as a business within the communities in which we operate.

So that’s the underpin to all the value we can create, economically and socially.

I’d have to say, if there’s a second thing, it’s delivering on our strategy – our short-term strategy right now. Because that will underpin the value that we’ve promised our stakeholders: the uplift to our shareholders, our communities, our employees. Delivering on our strategy in the next two years is critical.

So those are the two things that are within our control, that I spend a lot of time focusing on. And if I was going to say losing sleep over: it’s those.

The Finance Ghost: Absolutely. Richard, thank you. This has been such a cool discussion. It’s our first one as a Ghost Stories podcast. I hope it won’t be our last.

I suspect that you plan to do this for many years, and so do I, so hopefully there will be more to come.

Congratulations on a great update. And I think the big takeout today is for investors to hopefully understand the level of thinking that goes into the through-the-cycle nature of mining.

One beautiful quarter or year – yes, it’s often a reality around commodity prices and what those have done – but it’s the years prior that led to that point that made it look easy at the top of the cycle. That’s the stuff that matters.

So, Richard, thank you, and good luck for this period. I hope you make as much money as humanly possible as a South African, because that’s where this money is flowing to. And I look forward to doing another one of these with you at some point in the future.

Richard Stewart: Ghost, thank you very much. Real privilege to be here today. Thanks to your listeners, and certainly I look forward to a lot more of these discussions. Thank you so much for the opportunity. Real pleasure. Thank you.

Ghost Bites (AngloGold | Greencoat Renewables | Pan African Resources | Sea Harvest | The Foschini Group)

Record free cash flow at AngloGold (JSE: ANG)

Q1 free cash flow has nearly tripled year-on-year

It’s not called “a golden age” for nothing! The gold sector is absolutely cooking at the moment, with money just about falling out of the sky on a daily basis for the large mining houses.

AngloGold Ashanti is just the latest example, with numbers for the quarter ended March 2026 reflecting record free cash flow of R1.2 billion.

Although production was only 1% higher year-on-year, free cash flow increased by 190% to $1.2 billion (vs. $403 million a year ago). This was thanks to a 69% increase in the average gold price received.

They refer to “controllable costs” reducing by $22/oz thanks to various operating initiatives that offset residual operating cost pressures. But once you add in exchange rates and higher royalties, cash costs increased by $168/oz to $1,391/oz – that’s a 13.7% increase.

With the gold price moving so much higher though, cash margin jumped from 57% to 71%. Like I said: a golden age!

With three months of the year behind them, full year guidance for production, costs and capex is unchanged. In the meantime, shareholders can enjoy a record interim dividend and a share repurchase programme of up to $2 billion.


Greencoat Renewables could do with more wind (JSE: GCT)

They really need to make a trip to Cape Town

Greencoat Renewables has released a quarterly update for the three months to March 2026. The net asset value per share has ticked up by €0.50 to €0.995.

Net cash generation for the quarter was in line with budget and equated to 2.4x dividend cover. This allowed them to easily handle the Q1 dividend of around €0.017 per share.

Power generation was 10% below budget though, with 6% attributed to low wind resources. It’s mildly ironic writing this while I listen to a massive storm in Cape Town. Perhaps it really is time that Greencoat looked at opportunities down here?

Although they are running at 52% gearing at the moment, there’s a decent amount of cash on the balance sheet and they have even been doing share buybacks.

They’ve also made progress with their Green Digital Infrastructure Platform, which acquired its first asset.


Pan African Resources is making progress with the Emmerson acquisition in Australia (JSE: PAF)

The scheme booklet has been sent to Emmerson shareholders

Pan African Resources is looking to acquire 100% of the listed shares in Emmerson Resources in Australia. As part of this, Pan African will look to list on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX), making it much easier to get shareholders in Emmerson across the line on this share-for-share deal.

It’s only a Category 2 transaction for Pan African Resources, so a circular isn’t necessary and neither is shareholder approval. But on the other side, Emmerson shareholders need to give 75% approval to the transaction.

Pan African has highlighted the pro forma financial information in Emmerson’s scheme booklet (the Australian equivalent of a circular). It shows that the enlarged group would have a net asset value per share that is 28.35% larger than the current level at Pan African.

The meeting of Emmerson shareholders is scheduled for 15 June. If you would like to check out the scheme booklet, you’ll find it here.


Sea Harvest bids farewell to Ladismith Cheese (JSE: SHG)

With this deal out of the way, the company is more focused

Sea Harvest, as the name suggests, has its DNA firmly in the ocean. They are a large and important fishing group, although the volatility of that sector had previously led them down a path of diversification.

It’s almost always better for a company to focus on its core strengths than to diversify for the sake of it, so I think the company has done the right thing by disposing of Ladismith Cheese. The deal was announced at the end of 2025 and has now closed thanks to the receipt of Competition Commission approval.

If you’re keen to understand more about the company, including the initial entry into Ladismith Cheese and how the proceeds will filter into the group’s capital allocation policy, then you’ll enjoy the podcast I recorded with Sea Harvest in March. CEO Felix Rathed and Muhammad Brey delivered exceptional insights that you’ll find here.


The Foschini Group’s 50% off sale – in its share price! (JSE: TFG)

Things are going from bad to worse

The Foschini Group (which we can refer to as TFG for our collective sanity) has seen its share price roughly halve in the past 12 months. The good ol’ “50% off sale” is what you want to see at end of season, not when you look at the share price chart!

There’s not much indication of things getting any better, with the company releasing a trading update dealing with the three months to 28 March 2026.

In TFG Africa, sales were up 7.5% in total and 5.5% on a like-for-like basis. For the full year, sales increased 5.0% in total and 3.5% on a like-for-like basis. This may sound like a great acceleration towards the end of the year, but sales growth is only one part of the equation.

The other is of course margin, with TFG Africa’s EBIT for FY26 declining at a mid-teens percentage rate. There was some margin recovery in the final quarter, but it clearly wasn’t enough to make up for the awful numbers in the rest of the year.

To make it even worse, TFG Africa is the highlight of the numbers.

TFG London, one of the headaches, suffered flat sales for the year if you exclude the acquisition of White Stuff. If we isolate that acquisition, then pro forma sales growth was 4.3%.

TFG Australia is rapidly becoming another meme, just like Woolworths‘ (JSE: WHL) misadventures with David Jones in the land of animals that want to kill you. Sales fell by 1.3% for the quarter and 1.5% for the year. On a like-for-like basis, sales were down by a shocking 3.4% for the full year.

The trading update doesn’t give specific movements in profit for TFG London and TFG Australia individually, but it’s not hard to guess the direction of travel. The presence of large non-cash impairments in both businesses is another strong clue that all isn’t well.

Add it all together and you get a group performance (excluding White Stuff) of just 2.8% growth in sales. And at HEPS level, there’s a shocking drop of between 30% and 40% for the full year.

TFG Africa is doing all the heavy lifting here, but acquisitions over the years have led to the local business contributing only 68.3% to group turnover.

This is a prime example of “diworsification” instead of diversification, as TFG Africa’s modest positive momentum is being more than offset by the international businesses.

The other big risk is that management distraction in faraway lands can easily contribute to underperformance in TFG Africa, the one part of the business that actually has a right to win in its market.

What do you believe needs to happen here?


Results of previous poll:


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • A prescribed officer of African Rainbow Minerals (JSE: ARI) sold shares worth a meaty R34.8 million. Separately, two directors of different group subsidiaries sold shares worth R16.3 million in total.
    • An entity associated with Marcel Golding, the CEO of Rex Trueform (JSE: RTO | JSE: RTN) bought “N” ordinary shares worth over R2.5 million.
    • A director of a major subsidiary of Kumba Iron Ore (JSE: KIO) sold shares worth R97k.
    • A number of Anglo American (JSE: AGL) directors bought shares by reinvesting their dividends. Ditto for British American Tobacco (JSE: BTI) directors. These dividend-related trades don’t carry nearly as much weight for me as buying shares outside of the dividend cycle. I’m just mentioning them for the sake of completeness.
  • Araxi (JSE: AXX) received resounding approval from shareholders for the transaction to acquire an 80% stake in Pay@ Group. Just as importantly, the Competition Commission has unconditionally approved the acquisition. They will now work to get the final conditions across the line, with the big ones out of the way.
  • Sibanye-Stillwater (JSE: SSW) is having no difficulties in the debt market. The company priced an oversubscribed offering of $500 million in senior notes due 2031. The coupon on the notes is 6.25%. This five-and-a-half-year debt is being used to fund the repurchase of notes due in 2026 and 2029. Overall, the group is planning to reduce gross debt by 50% over the next two to three years.
  • Finbond (JSE: FGL) has released a trading statement for the year ended 28 February 2026. HEPS is expected to swing positive, moving from a headline loss per share of -1.9 cents to a profit of at least 2.9 cents. The share price is R1.09 though, so this profitability is still marginal relative to the share price.
  • Newpark REIT (JSE: NRL) has very thin trade in its stock, but it owns some really interesting and iconic buildings in Sandton. The company initially expected the dividend per share for the year ended February 2026 to be in line with the revised funds from operations per share of between 41.50 and 48.50 cents. But thanks to lower than expected operating costs, the dividend will actually be 50.07 cents for the year. This is unfortunately still a decrease of 36.1% vs. the prior year.
  • JSE Limited (JSE: JSE) – the company that is listed on its own exchange – announced a couple of changes to roles on the board. The big one is that Ian Kirk has been appointed as lead independent due to the retirement of Ben Kruger.
  • This isn’t something you can invest in directly (well, not yet at least), but African Bank’s deal to buy the home loan book from Eskom Finance has fallen through. African Bank is putting a positive spin on it, with the board deciding to focus on pursuing growth from the acquisitions made between 2022 and 2025. I must point out that the bank has a new CEO, so perhaps the change in management during the implementation of the deal has led to its demise. This wouldn’t be uncommon, as CEOs aren’t always happy to inherit the deals of their predecessors.

Why are lawns a thing?

The modern lawn is more than just a patch of grass. It’s a story we’ve been retelling for centuries.

Winter is bearing down on Cape Town as I write this article, and while it may not be my favourite season, there is one thing about it that I love: for the next few months, I won’t have to water my lawn. 

In the height of the dry summer, I have to set reminders on my phone so I don’t forget to go out and drag hosepipes and sprinklers across the grass (for the eco-conscious readers – don’t worry, it’s borehole water), and then set more alarms in 40 minute intervals so I don’t also forget to go out and reposition said sprinklers. 

I’m always either neglecting my grass to the point that it turns yellow or overwatering it to the point that it turns yellow. So when winter comes around, I breathe a sigh of relief, sit back and let nature take care of the watering schedule for a while. 

Ubiquitous though it may be, grass certainly didn’t earn its popularity by being a low maintenance addition to the garden. That’s probably why so many of my neighbours are defecting to astroturf – none of the watering or mowing required, and if you turn your head and squint at it from a distance, it kind of looks like the real thing. I can’t fault the logic, but there’s just something a little too dystopian about a plastic lawn; it gives me the shivers. 

How did we get to the point where most of our outside spaces are dominated by a singular plant species? It won’t surprise you to learn that there’s an interesting story there.

An idea as old as grass

Before they were bestowed upon homeowners as part of their private property, lawns were in fact a communal thing. 

The first “lawns” were probably what we would call village greens or town commons. This is a concept that developed in England during the Middle Ages, and the use case back then was more practical than decorative. Villagers found it useful to have a central green space where animals like cows, sheep and horses could be gathered overnight in order to protect them from wild animals or human thieves. By day, an open green space came in handy for setting up markets and conducting trade.

Any animal that belonged to a villager had the right to graze on this communal pasture; as a result, the perpetually-getting-eaten grass was always at a cropped length. In time, this short-length grass became known as lawn.

Very soon, those who lived outside the village – the aristocracy in their castles – adopted the idea of lawns as well. There were multiple reasons why this made sense for them: for one thing, it kept their livestock grazing close to home, right outside the castle walls, where they were easier to keep an eye on. A lawn dotted with peacefully grazing animals also did good things for the landowners image, as it aligned them well with the pastoral images of sheep and shepherds so often mentioned in the Bible. Having sheep grazing outside your castle was therefore considered a sign that you were a good and pious Christian. 

And then there was the downright practical fact that enemies approaching your castle were that much easier to spot if they were trying to sneak up on you over a closely cropped lawn versus, say, from a densely wooded forest. Clear the trees, clear the view of trouble approaching. 

Popularity up, practicality down

Fast forward a few centuries to the 1700s, and the popularity of lawns was only going up. Thanks to their adoption by the aristocracy in the Middle Ages, flat expanses of grass had gained a powerful aspirational appeal. 

This appeal was fanned by the fact that nobles soon tired of having their lawns maintained by animals, as was the original, mutually beneficial arrangement. The height of luxury now was having the ability to stroll across your grounds without encountering a grazing animal (or a grazing animal’s droppings). 

So lawns stayed, but the animals that maintained them got put out to pasture (quite literally). But then what was going to stop the grass from growing to knee-grazing lengths? Well, people, of course. Not the nobles themselves, but people they employed, similarly to how they employed people to pick fruit in their orchards or harvest barley in their fields. 

Herein lies the flex, as we Millennials like to say. Much like today, land in the 18th century was a signal of wealth. The more land you had, the more food you could cultivate, animals you could keep, or mills you could put up. All of the work that went into your land produced things that you could either eat or sell, and that was why you were rich. 

Now imagine you have fertile land, and you use it to grow something that adds absolutely no value beyond its aesthetic. You cannot eat your lawn or cut it down and sell it. In fact, keeping it costs you money – you have to water it regularly and then pay someone to cut it down with a scythe once a fortnight so it continues to look nice. 

To someone living through the 18th century, seeing a rolling expanse of lawn implied one thing: that the landowner had so much land and so many resources that they could afford to waste some of it on something as useless and demanding as grass. It was the horticultural equivalent of spotting a golden Rolex on someone’s wrist. 

Remember, even back then, grass was hard work – one could argue that it was probably even harder work then than it is now, because sprinkler systems and lawnmowers hadn’t been invented yet. A lawn was therefore as much a symbol of wealth as it was a symbol of the landowners ability to (pay someone to) control nature, exert power over it and shape it to their will. 

Grass goes global

If we accept that lawns were first conceptualised and idealised in the Northern Hemisphere, then how did they manage to spread all over the world? Well, as it happens, the British were on somewhat of a world tour between the 16th and 17th centuries, and adding many exotic colonies to their collection along the way. 

The British lawn fetish was transferred to these new colonies through a number of turf-based British sports like cricket, football, rugby and golf. Before long, lawns were springing up in places like India and North America – climates that were not necessarily ideal for a plant species that required a temperate climate and a steady supply of water. 

With every apparent restriction that nature tried to put on the growing of grass, humanity doubled down on our desire for it. Consider the fact that, from a climate perspective, the USA is actually a very hard place to maintain a green lawn. Approximately 40% of the continent is arid or semi-arid. 70-75% of the continent gets winter snow, with around 50% receiving significant amounts of it. 

While it isn’t technically impossible to grow grass under these conditions, it takes a lot of resources to do so – significantly more so than it would to grow indigenous plants that are adapted to each region’s climate and soil. Yet to this day, a green lawn is an unshakeable part of the American Dream™ (white picket fence sold separately).

Is the grass still greener?

Lawns were never about practicality or ecology. They were never even really about grass. They were about signalling.

First, it was the signal of order in a chaotic world: a neatly cropped space where animals gathered and communities met. Then it became a signal of power: land cleared to expose enemies, to project control, to frame a castle just so. Later, it evolved into a signal of wealth: land so abundant it could be rendered useless, labour so cheap it could be spent maintaining something purely ornamental.

That signal survived the centuries. It followed ships across oceans, embedded itself in suburban dreams, and arrived here, in a water-scarce corner of Cape Town, borehole-water hosepipe in hand.

Because if you strip it back, the modern lawn is a kind of default setting we rarely question. We water it, mow it, fertilise it; not because it makes sense, but because it’s what a “proper” home is supposed to look like.

But what exactly are we trying to prove? That we have control over nature? That we can afford the water? That we belong to a centuries-old aesthetic rooted in European climates and aristocratic ideals?

So maybe the question isn’t why lawns are a thing. 

Maybe it’s: why are they still?

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.

Her first book, Lessons from Loss, has been published by Penguin Random House.

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.

Dominique can be reached on LinkedIn here.

Ghost Bites (Altron | Datatec | Gold Fields | Lesaka Technologies | Life Healthcare | Sappi | Southern Sun)

Altron has tightened up its earnings guidance (JSE: AEL)

And the numbers look good!

Altron has released an updated trading statement for the year ended February 2026.

In their initial trading statement released in February, they had guided an increase in HEPS from continuing operations of at least 30%, and a jump in HEPS from group operations of at least 50%.

We now know that the increase in HEPS from continuing operations will be between 31% and 37%. From group operations, HEPS will increase by between 68% and 74%.

This has been one of the most impressive turnaround stories on the JSE. Through various important corporate actions and an overall improvement in performance, they’ve achieved share price growth of 160% over the past three years!


Datatec is doing extremely well (JSE: DTC)

Understanding the momentum through the year will be important

Datatec has released a trading statement for the year ended February 2026. The numbers look spectacular, with HEPS expected to jump by between 51% and 58.8% (in US cents – the company’s reporting currency).

If you use underlying earnings per share, which excludes share-based payments, the increase is between 31.7% and 37.3%. This is to help make the results more comparable to peers. Either way, these are excellent numbers.

The results were driven by Westcon International and Logicalis International, with Logicalis Latin America experiencing only a slight increase in gross profit.

Something to note is that the interim period was actually even better. In the six months to August 2025, underlying earnings per share had increased by 43% and HEPS had jumped by 109.5%.

When detailed results are released on 26 May, the market will want to look at the momentum in earnings and figure out the reasons for the significant difference in H1 vs. H2 performance.


Gold Fields gives us great data points on inflation (JSE: GFI)

For now at least, the gold price is more than making up for it

With the first quarter of the financial year behind them, Gold Fields remains on track for full-year guidance.

They just achieved an increase in attributable gold-equivalent production of 15% year-on-year, so they are looking to take full advantage of favourable gold prices. The Salares Norte mine’s first full year of production is an important driver of this increase.

Quarter-on-quarter production figures fell by 7%, so that’s something to keep an eye on. There was also a jump in all-in sustaining costs (AISC) of 13% year-on-year and 9% quarter-on-quarter, with inflation as one of the drivers of higher costs.

They give excellent disclosure on some of the underlying inflationary pressures. It goes beyond just diesel, with other inputs like cyanide and LNG also increasing substantially.

If the oil price sticks at around $100/barrel, then Gold Fields forecasts an impact on costs of $40/oz to $50/oz on a portfolio level.

For now, the gold price is protecting them from this issue. Despite the dip in quarter-on-quarter production, revenue increased by 16% in this quarter vs. the three months to December.

The balance sheet is even healthier as a result. Net debt has decreased by 34% over the past 12 months. Net debt to EBITDA is just 0.19x now vs. 0.26x at the end of December 2025. It’s not hard to see why the company feels confident to do share buybacks.

As you would imagine at a group of this size and importance, there are many underlying projects underway. They have no fewer than 21 active projects in the greenfields portfolio, including 13 in drilling!

Sustaining capex for the year is forecast to be between $1.3 billion and $1.4 billion. They will also spend between $600 million and $700 million on growth capex.


Lesaka Technologies has raised FY26 guidance (JSE: LSK)

This is the kind of thing that investors want to see

Lesaka suffers from thin liquidity in its stock, which is why the share price closed flat on a day that probably should’ve seen some fireworks.

They released an update for the third quarter that reflected performance at the upper end of profitability guidance. They even raised guidance for FY26! But for whatever reason, the market wasn’t particularly interested.

If we dig a bit deeper, we find that net revenue increased by 16% year-on-year in rand terms. Adjusted EBITDA increased by 45%, so the shape of the income statement in response to that revenue growth is encouraging.

Operating income increased by a casual 804% – and yes, that means it was 9x higher year-on-year. Perhaps most importantly, they’ve swung from a net loss to net income.

The disappointment in the numbers is the Merchant segment, where net revenue dipped by 4%. This is exactly what the market doesn’t want to see, especially from the largest segment. Consumer revenue jumped 41% and Enterprise was up 78%.

Worries around the Merchant business aside, Lesaka’s other growth engines are firing on all cylinders. This has led to the increase in guidance, with adjusted earnings per share for the year ending June 2026 expected to be between R5.50 and R6.00.

This guidance still excludes the Bank Zero acquisition, which remains subject to regulatory approvals.


Life Healthcare’s share price landed up in the hospital (JSE: LHC)

The market hated the latest update

Life Healthcare dropped by a 11% on Thursday, after releasing a trading update that was heavily impacted by a medical scheme being placed into curatorship. Other online reports suggest that Sizwe Hosmed is the scheme in question.

Either way, paid patient days were down by 0.4% thanks to the loss in volumes from this issue. If you exclude the curatorship, then paid patient days would’ve been up by 0.9%. The market doesn’t seem to have been very interested in that argument though.

With revenue up by between 2.2% and 2.6% for the six months to March 2026, it’s surprising (and impressive) that the company managed to achieved normalised EBITDA growth of between 4.9% and 5.3%.

The increase in HEPS is unfortunately a useless metric, as the prior period was heavily distorted by the Piramal liability associated with the Life Molecular Imaging deal. Instead, it’s better to just look at the expected HEPS range from continuing operations of between 50.6 cents and 52.6 cents.

The company has wisely split out the LMI issues and given us a pro forma movement. This is the key metric to remember: HEPS on that basis has moved by between 0% and 4% for continuing operations.

The market was clearly looking for more.


Sappi goes from bad to worse (JSE: SAP)

The share price is plumbing new depths

I’ve been keeping an eye on Sappi to see if the share price would find some positive momentum and deliver excellent cyclical returns. My worry has been that this time, it really is different in the paper market.

First, let me show you what this chart looks like over the long term:

The idea here is to buy at the extreme lows, strap yourself in and wait for the cycle to turn.

But with the share price dropping another 13% on Thursday in response to the second quarter update, it’s clear that the market still hates this thing and is losing faith in its ability to weather the storm.

There are two major problems here.

The first is that the digital age is unfriendly towards paper, so a cyclical industry has perhaps transformed into an industry in structural decline.

The other problem is that Sappi’s balance sheet has taken more punishment than a northern hemisphere prop after 70 minutes against the Boks, so they are in no shape to actually deal with disasters like the spike in energy prices and a potential recession.

In the latest quarter, revenue dipped by 1% and adjusted EBITDA tanked by 51%. That is truly awful. They are now deep in the red, with a loss of $413 million vs. a loss of just $20 million a year ago.

Net debt is up 18% to just under $2 billion, with efforts to reduce capex proving to be insufficient to address the slide. I somehow doubt that lenders are sleeping very well at night right now, with the net asset value having decreased by 24% in the space of 12 months.

There are pockets of hope, like a 27% increase in North American paperboard volumes. But with selling prices under pressure and inflation assaulting their manufacturing margins, I think Sappi’s share price is going to plumb new depths.

This time, it seems to be different. But what do you think?


Southern Sun had a fantastic second half (JSE: SSU)

They are dealing with a difficult macroeconomic period from a position of strength

In the six months to September 2025, Southern Sun struggled with a 6% decline in operating profit and flat adjusted HEPS. But the second half of the year clearly told a very different story, as a trading statement for the year to March 2026 notes adjusted HEPS growth of a delightful 17% to 21%!

In case you’re wondering, HEPS on an unadjusted basis increased by 18% to 22%, so there’s not much of a difference there.

Strong occupancy levels were a major driver here, with overall occupancy of 62.9% vs. 60.8% in 2025. It’s certainly worth noting that the Paradise Sun in the offshore business had been closed for refurbishment in the first half of the year, so that’s clearly part of the H1 vs H2 skew.

The South African portfolio ran at 64.3% (vs. 61.9% in 2025), with demand driven by foreign inbound travel and demand in the MICE segment – Meetings, Incentives, Conferences and Exhibitions. The G20 in Gauteng was just one example in the second half of the year.

It’s more than slightly funny that a hotel group describes one of its key drivers as being MICE!

Mozambique still sounds like a difficult situation, with only marginal improvements in trading performance in the second half of the year. The company has also flagged the impact of the war in the Middle East, with oil prices making travel far more expensive.

They have a strong balance sheet to weather any storms, with net cash of R86 million. With the share price up 4.5% year-to-date, the market is shrugging off the risks and giving the management team the credit they deserve. The reality is that even the best management team in the world can’t do much about the cost of inbound travel skyrocketing, so I worry about the impact on the next financial period of the prolonged spike in oil prices.


Results of previous poll:


Nibbles:

  • Director dealings:
    • In the latest game of musical shares at the Wiese dinner table, various entities related to Dr. Christo Wiese and Adv. Jacob Wiese have entered into swaps and associated transactions over Shoprite (JSE: SHP) shares worth R943 million.
  • On such a busy day of news, MTN’s (JSE: MTN) update on the performance at MTN Uganda must land in the Nibbles. This is one of the smaller subsidiaries in the group, which is a pity as MTN Uganda has historically proven to be a dependable performer in Africa. But in the latest quarter, service revenue was up by only 7.7% and EBITDA margin actually declined by 180 basis points to 50.6%. Profit after tax dipped by 3.8%. Unlike in Nigeria and Ghana where MTN is growing rapidly in this environment, Uganda could only manage a “resilient” performance. This is why diversification is important.
  • 4Sight Holdings (JSE: 4SI) – a small cap that behaves like a company that wants to be a large cap – announced some positive news around the X4 Group acquisition that they made in 2025. For the year ended February 2026, that business exceeded 110% of its agreed net profit after tax target of just over R6 million. These are small numbers in the greater scheme of things, but small successful deals add up very nicely over time. I’ve been very tempted to take a small position here.
  • Tharisa (JSE: THA) is in the process of transitioning to underground mining. The latest update is that the company has concluded a five-year contract with Cementation Africa regarding the underground mining development and construction work at the Tharisa mine. They refer to the contract as being structured on a cost-plus-fee basis with “aligned principles” rather than a “traditional rates-based, risk transfer model” – interesting! And if the name Cementation Africa sounds familiar to you, it’s because this company was acquired out of the charred remains of Murray & Roberts by Differential Capital and a consortium of investors.
  • Montauk Renewables (JSE: MKR) has released results for the quarter ended March 2026. They put literally zero effort into the SENS announcement, merely pointing investors in the direction of the SEC filing. They are still slightly loss-making despite a 9% increase in revenue.
  • Sebata Holdings (JSE: SEB), which is currently suspended from trading, has issued a cautionary announcement – just in case there are people who are willing to do off-market trades! Jokes aside, cautionary announcements are still a requirement even if the shares are suspended from trading. The reason for the cautionary is that the company has entered into negotiations with a non-related third party regarding the potential disposal of assets. They haven’t indicated which assets, or given any other information at this time.

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

Although PPC has not released any information to shareholders, and is currently not trading under cautionary, reports in the media suggest that Heidelberg Materials, a German building materials firm, is considering making a bid for the local cement maker. This is not the first time that PPC has attracted attention. Past suitors have included Fairfax Africa Investments, Holcim, Dangote Cement, CRH and AfriSam.

Diversified technology group 4Sight acquired X4 Solutions and XFour Technology in April 2025 in a move to expand its digital enterprise ecosystem and strengthen its footprint in workforce technologies. The acquisitions, which specialise in integrating and optimising HR and payroll systems in 20 countries across Africa, can tailor enterprise-grade offerings to the unique dynamics of the African labour market. The purchase consideration payable was split into two separate tranches with an initial payment of R21,2 million comprising equally of cash and share components. The second tranche, in the form of an earn-out of R21,2 million, was subject to the financial performance of the companies over the year to 28 February 2026, which the group exceeded, resulting in payment of the related earnout.

Burstone’s disposal of the rentable office property located at 2 Ncondo Place in Umhlanga in KZN to Pappamia for an undisclosed sum has been approved by the Competition Commission.

Black woman-owned and managed Siyanqoba Ngamandla Engineering Services (Siyanqoba) has received undisclosed funding support from the Abadali Fund, a black Business Growth Fund which forms part of the Abadali Equity Equivalent Investment Programme (EEIP). The programme is an economic inclusion initiative by the Department of Trade, Industry and Competition in partnership with J.P. Morgan and managed by Edge Growth Ventures. The facility will enable Siyanqoba to acquire specialised mining equipment, expand its operational capacity and create additional jobs. Siyanqoba services the likes of Seriti Resources, Thungela and Glencor.

Pan-African infrastructure fund, the Africa50 Infrastructure Acceleration Fund which had raised US$300 million by the end of its third close in December 2025, is looking to add a further $100 million in the final round. The fund will invest in equity and quasi-equity in infrastructure companies and projects in Africa focusing on power and energy, transportation and logistics, water and sanitation, and digital and social infrastructure.

Weekly corporate finance activity by SA exchange-listed companies

In August 2024, MC Mining signed an agreement with Kinetic Development Group (KDG) which would see KDG subscribe for shares in aggregate of 51%. The deal was structured to be completed in two tranches. The first tranche, completed in 2024 and equal to a 13.04% stake, was valued at the time at US$12,97 million (R230,88 million). The second tranche valued at $77 million (R1,43 billion) has now been completed, raising KDG’s shareholding in MC Mining to 51%.

This week the following companies announced the repurchase of shares:

During the month of April AIMIA repurchased and cancelled a total of 228,900 of its shares representing 0.3% of the company’s issued share capital. The shares were purchased at an average price of US$2.79 for an aggregate $638,344.

Quilter announced it would commence a share buyback programme to repurchase shares with a value of up to £100 million in order to reduce the share capital of the company and return capital to shareholders. This week Quilter announced the repurchase of a further 1,655,272 shares on the LSE with an aggregate value of £3,03 million and 59,963 shares on the JSE with an aggregate value of R2,46 million.

Ninety One plc announced the extension of its repurchase programme from 31 March 2026 to 3 June 2026. The shares to be purchased on the open market are cancelled to reduce the Company’s ordinary share capital. This week the company repurchased a further 732,914 ordinary shares at an average price 213 pence for an aggregate £1,277 million.

GreenCoat Renewables has implemented a share buyback programme totalling €100 million over 12 months with a first tranche amounting to €25 million beginning on 5 March 2026 – representing 13% of the issued share capital. This week 1,071,217 shares were repurchased for and aggregate €1830,378.

Anheuser-Busch InBev’s US$6 billion share buy-back programme continues. The shares acquired will be kept as treasury shares to fulfil future share delivery commitments under the group’s stock ownership plans. During the period 26 April – 1 May 2026, the group repurchased 1,017,064 shares for €64,12 million.

In December 2025, British American Tobacco extended its share buyback programme by a further £1.3 billion for 2026. The shares will be cancelled. This week the company repurchased a further 517,811 shares at an average price of £42.83 per share for an aggregate £22,18 million.

During the period 28 – 30 April 2026, Prosus repurchased a further 1,528,155 Prosus shares for an aggregate €62,21 million and Naspers, a further 515,869 Naspers shares for a total consideration of R460,58 million.

One company issued or withdrew a cautionary notice: Sebata.

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

Fintech platform, Kaleidofin, has closed Kenya’s first private-sector local currency securitisation in the smallholder agriculture sector, in partnership with Apollo Agriculture and with investment from the IDH Farmfit Fund. The transaction mobilised KES276 million (approximately US$2,5 million) through the securitisation of receivables originated by Apollo Agriculture, covering a portfolio of 23,839 smallholder farmers, 51% of whom are women, with an average loan size of KES 17,942 and approximately 22% first-time borrowers. Structured through Kaleidofin’s ki platform, a dedicated debt capital market infrastructure, the transaction enables the conversion of granular agricultural loans into investable assets for institutional investors.

Botswana-listed, African multinational financial services group, Letshego Africa, has announced the sale of 100% of the issued share capital of five of its East and West African subsidiaries to Axian Digital Venture Holdings and Management Limited. The subsidiaries, Letshego Ghana Savings and Loans PLC; Letshego Faidika Bank Tanzania Limited; Letshego Microfinance Bank Nigeria Limited; Letshego Rwanda PLC Limited and Letshego Uganda Limited were sold to the UAE-based company for an undisclosed sum.

Nigeria’s BFREE, a Pan-African debt recovery and distressed credit investor, has secured new funding aimed at expanding its ability to purchase bad loan portfolios from banks and digital lenders across Africa. The funding round was led by AfricInvest through its Financial Inclusion Vehicle (FIVE) and also included Algebra Ventures and existing investors Capria Ventures, VestedWorld, Axian CVC, Angaza Capital, and 4Di Capital.

Trafigura Pte Ltd. has entered into exclusive negotiations with the Egyptian Aluminium Company (Egyptalum) and the Metallurgical Industries Holding Company (MIH) to develop a new primary aluminium smelter in Egypt. The trio intend to establish a newly-incorporated company that will construct, own and operate a 300,000 tonne per annum primary aluminium smelter, alongside a 150,000 tonne per annum anode plant, at Egyptalum’s Nag Hammadi complex. The new facilities would nearly double the site’s current annual production capacity. Trafigura will participate as a minority equity investor in the new company, as well as a debt provider and long-term offtake and feedstock supply counterparty. Total investment costs for the project are estimated at between US$750 million and $900 million.

The Africa Ecosystem Catalysts Facility, a US$4 million pilot investment facility managed by Village Capital with funding from the Dutch Entrepreneurial Development Bank (FMO) and the Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO), has announced its first two investments in Ghana. The Facility is investing in Rivia Clinics, a tech-enabled primary healthcare startup ($200,000), and VDL Fulfilment, an e-commerce logistics platform built for African SMEs ($150,000), both based in Accra.

The Emerging Africa & Asia Infrastructure Fund (EAAIF) has committed a US$40 million senior secured loan to support the development of Egypt’s first sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) production facility. The $212,4 million project will be located in Egypt’s Sokhna Special Economic Zone and developed by Green Sky Capital Limited and its local subsidiary, SAF Fly Egypt. Once operational, the facility is expected to produce 200,000 tonnes per year of biofuels, including SAF, hydrotreated vegetable oil, bio-propane and bio-naphtha. Additional financing was provided by Qatar National Bank, through its Egyptian subsidiary, with a commitment of up to US$31,4 million, and by The Arab Energy Fund, which contributed $71,4 million.

PODCAST: No Ordinary Wednesday Ep126 | Investing through the noise

Listen to the podcast here:

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Investec-banner.jpg

Markets are moving fast but are investors moving with intent?

In this episode of No Ordinary Wednesday, we go beyond market headlines to unpack what investors are actually doing in a volatile, news-driven environment.

From trading the news cycle to navigating currency swings and concentrated markets, Investec’s Tinus Rautenbach and Bongani Nhleko share real insights from the Clarity platform, revealing where capital is flowing, how behaviour is shifting, and the risks investors may not see.

Listen now to understand the gap between perception and portfolio reality and what it means for your investment decisions. Read more on www.investec.com/now

Please scroll down for the transcript if you wish to read instead of listen.

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

Also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and YouTube:

Transcript:

[00:00:00] Jeremy: Investors in South Africa are navigating a market shaped less by fundamentals… and more by reaction.

In recent weeks, geopolitical tension has driven sharp moves across oil, currencies and global equities. The rand has swung – weakening, recovering, and shifting again, often within days.

And yet, despite the volatility, equity markets have remained relatively resilient, with returns increasingly concentrated in a narrow set of sectors and stocks.

Because what feels like active decision-making is often just exposure playing out beneath the surface. A concentrated local market can mean portfolios are less diversified than they appear. And a volatile currency means offshore returns are driven as much by the rand as by the underlying assets.

So, in an environment like this, the real question isn’t just what markets are doing… but how investors are responding.

I’m Jeremy Maggs, and this is No Ordinary Wednesday – Investec’s podcast on what’s moving markets, shaping economies and influencing investment decisions.

In this episode, I’m joined by Investec’s Tinus Rautenbach, Head of Clarity, and Bongani Nhleko, Operations Consultant for Clarity – an online trading platform that provides instant access to local and global markets, in rands or foreign currency, with a low minimum investment.

Together, we’ll go beyond theory to unpack what investors are doing in real time, where capital is flowing, and the risks that may not be immediately visible.

Tinus, Bongani, welcome to No Ordinary Wednesday.

[00:01:43] Jeremy: So Bongani, I want to start with you. When headlines hit, whether it’s escalation in the Middle East or a sharp oil move, how do Clarity users react within 24 hours? Are they stepping into volatility or stepping away from it?

[00:01:59] Bongani: Well, what we usually see is a mix, but the dominant reaction is pausing rather than panicking. There’s an initial spike in connectivity as you’d expect, people logging in, checking their balances, scrutinising the share prices, but fewer impulsive trades than you might expect.

Some clients do step into volatility though, as you would expect from the more experienced traders who see it as an opportunity. The vast majority tend to wait, digest, and look for confirmation before acting.

[00:02:27] Jeremy: And I’m assuming that in a moment like this, timing as far as outcomes are concerned, means everything.

[00:02:34] Bongani: Yes, that is generally the accepted term. However, in this specific case, timing is more about sequencing not speed. The better outcomes usually come from investors who take a moment to see how the story evolves before reacting, because sometimes markets can often overshoot on the first move. Those who wait for direction rather than the drama tend to make more considered decisions.

You act too fast and your emotion can get in the way. You act too late and the markets already priced it in. The sweet spot is responding once the dust has settled.

[00:03:06] Jeremy: So Tinus, talking about drama despite intense geopolitical tension, equity markets, I think you’ll agree, have been relatively resilient, even hitting highs in some cases with gains concentrated though in a handful of sectors. So, here’s my question, if only a few sectors are driving returns, are we underestimating how fragile this rally actually is?

[00:03:27] Tinus: I think it’s fascinating to be in a world where we’ve got a war in the Middle East, we still have a war in the Ukraine on the go, we have got changing politics coming out of America by the minute or by the tweet, and it is interesting that the equity market is so resilient and robust. Having said that and looking at how concentrated it is, it does feel like it’s fragile, and part of that fragility you have seen in some big market moves over the last month, in the past six weeks, and so yeah, there is a bit of a fragility in the move.

It’s been very hard for the market to call whether this is a rally that will keep on going and it’s probably too soon to tell. The market is very excited whenever there’s any inkling of the Strait of Hormuz opening again. And, at the moment, the market is news-driven.

[00:04:17] Jeremy: And that’s the conundrum, then it’s the problem. We often talk about flight to safety in theory, so gold, dollars, bonds, but in practice, some investors don’t always follow the script. So, I’m interested to know what you’ve observed. Are investors following the textbook crisis path or are they writing their own playbook?

And is it driven by conviction or, as Bongani alluded to earlier, the speed of information?

[00:04:42] Tinus: The playbook has definitely changed, and the playbook we’ve seen is gold rally and essentially a dollar weakness maybe for the last 18 months or 12 to 18 months. That has played out outside of this loss – the crisis in the Middle East – and the playbook has maybe moved away from just purely looking at a single asset class as your safe haven towards clients looking at diversification. And we see clients instead of maybe going into a single asset class, going into ETFs or diversified plays, to be able to to weather the storm, and looking at various indices etc, to do that instead of just buying, as you say, gold or just trying to park in dollars.

Specifically between gold, dollars and bonds, the correlations have broken down, some of the narrative that used to be gospel is not gospel anymore. And so clients have definitely moved away from just blindly following the old about what to invest in when there’s risk. And the playbook has become more diversification across multi-jurisdiction, multi-index, multi-asset class.

And that’s been made much simpler through some of the products available now.

[00:05:54] Jeremy: So Tinus, if the playbook has changed, it’s all now about philosophy and mindset and I wonder then if investors are trying to trade the busy news cycle rather than investing through it. Does that behaviour actually add value over time, I wonder?

[00:06:11] Tinus: Picking up on what Bongani said earlier, we definitely have a spread of clients that we see that some of them are really familiar with both instruments and the market and are very comfortable to trade the news and to take a view on how they think things will play out. But we also have a big base of clients that are using investment as a real long-term play, and news cycles are less relevant. So, we are seeing a bit of both.

We’ve seen so many research articles showing that ad hoc trading around news usually destroys value instead of creating value, for most of your novice traders, but we see some experienced traders that enjoy trading the news cycles.

[00:06:53] Jeremy: Bongani, I’m coming to you in just a moment, but Tinus looking at the concentration of stocks, as we outlined at the beginning of this conversation, which we are seeing both locally and globally, I guess we’ve got to ask whether investors are diversified enough? Are they leaning into that or trying to diversify away from it, and which approach is then proving to be more effective?

[00:07:15] Tinus: We on average see that platforms nowadays give you easy access, both local and foreign diversified through, as I mentioned earlier, products like ETFs. We on average see accounts being well diversified, geography as well as industry. So clients are using the tools to easily diversify.

You might actually now get into a space where clients are over diversified and buying ETFs that hold similar stocks across, or similar indices across, and you’re not necessarily getting incremental value.

So, diversification is very good. It creates a different tool to deal with obviously the shocks and the volatility that we’ve seen, but we almost have to be a little bit weary of being too diversified, and they’re not necessarily getting the equity risk premium that you will get from owning stocks.

[00:06:53] Jeremy: So Bongani, let me push a little bit on diversification for local investors. Offshore exposure is often seen as diversification, but obviously returns are heavily influenced by the rand. Strategically then, how are they navigating this dynamic? Are they investing offshore for assets or for currency?

[00:08:24] Bongani: It’s honestly a bit of both. We see some investors are very deliberate about their offshore exposure. They want access to the global companies, the sectors, and the growth themes that they offer, which simply aren’t available locally. For them the asset comes first and the currency is almost a secondary benefit. What we’re seeing more recently is growing awareness of this trade off.

Though investors are starting to understand that offshore returns aren’t just about picking the right shares or stocks and ETFs, currency can amplify your gains just as much as it can mute it. So as a result, we’re starting to see investors have more realistic expectations of what the market can do for them, both on the stocks level as well as from a currency level.

People are thinking more consciously about when they want to go offshore and how much they want to allocate to their offshore allowance, and whether they’re comfortable with the currency swings being a major driver of their returns in the short term.

[00:09:18] Jeremy: Gentlemen, we are going to get back to the conversation in just a moment, but before we continue, I just want to touch more on Clarity by Investec.

It is a secure, straightforward investing platform designed for those who prefer to do it themselves.

It gives you direct access to local and global markets, with seamless currency exchange and share trading built in.

There’s no advice layer and no complexity – just the tools you need to invest on your terms, backed by the infrastructure and regulatory standards of a global bank.

Clarity by Investec. Investing, your way. Visit nowclarity.com for more information.

[00:09:55] Jeremy: Tinus, back to you then. Which sectors are seeing the biggest increase in interest on Clarity right now? And is that being driven by fundamentals or, as we’ve discussed a little earlier, the narrative?

[00:10:08] Tinus: At the moment, interest is driven by the narrative and not necessarily by the fundamentals. We have seen lots of activity in oil and oil- related exposure, which is fully expected. And so, at the moment, it’s more driven by narrative, I think. Interesting.

Just to touch on local or foreign narrative – as of the budget speech, South Africans can now take out R2 million under the SDA. It creates a lot more opportunity for clients to invest or makes it much easier to invest internationally.

And so it’s easier to get exposure to the BP’s, the Shells, to play this narrative. So, we’ve definitely seen a pickup in that.

[00:10:46] Jeremy: Which means Tinus, increase in activity in areas like commodities, energy, and even global tech. Given this current uncertain environment, is that positioning sustained or do you think it’s just short term?

[00:10:59] Tinus: Well, there’s no crystal ball here, Jeremy. I know you’d love to get the stock tip, but I think it’s harder to talk about the sustained runs or rallies.

Commodities and energy, ultimately, we’ll find a way to normalise because it drives inflation, and if inflation gets too hot, ultimately activity comes out of the GDP and out of industry, and therefore, demand will fall.

So, I think around commodities and energy, there’s a self-correcting process, and the cycle will correct itself if it runs too hot.

Global tech is a slightly different narrative. We all read a lot about AI and the advancements, etc, and a big part of the global tech rally is actually around –perceived correctly or not – increasing in productivity that AI can bring to civilisation as a whole.

And so maybe depending on whether we think it’s really overvalued or not, we’ll have different driving forces because you obviously can still see the massive productivity gains if some of the prediction around how the technology plays out comes true. So, some of it, I think, may be more sustained, but commodities and energy will have some self-correcting process to it.

[00:12:12] Jeremy: So Bongani, back to you then. Beyond equities, what instruments are gaining traction and what does this reflect? What are you seeing?

[00:12:19] Bongani: So, we’re seeing a growing interest in cash-like instruments on some defensive income-style assets. This tells us that investors aren’t necessarily bending all risk, but they’re rather becoming a little bit more selective.

There’s a clear desire for them to earn something whilst they’re waiting, rather than being completely all in or sidelined at the same time. We’re seeing quite a few people branch out into alternative investments, particularly cryptocurrencies. For some investors, crypto is viewed as a long-term hedge or diversification play rather than your short-term trade.

Alongside that, there’s also been a noticeable trend, as Tinus actually mentioned, toward AI-related investments. And whilst neither of us have a crystal ball here, it’s gaining a lot of traction. A lot of clients are trying to get all their hands on top of AI-related products, whether it be directly through companies or global tech companies that are actually producing these AI bots or agents as you may want to call them.

What we can see again is that there is some form of a structural trend that people are starting to see whether that’s going to be a long-term decision or long-term perception that holds or a passing cycle, we’ll only be able to know in a couple of years, I suppose.

[00:13:31] Jeremy: Tinus, back to you, and correct me if I’m wrong, but one of the risks I imagine in volatile markets is increased activity without improved outcomes. What are the most common mistakes that you are seeing right now?

[00:13:44] Tinus: I think it’s part of your old trading strategy, trading style, trading philosophy, “plan the trade and trade the plan”, and in high news flow environments like we have at the moment, trader individuals do tend to overreact, change their plan without necessarily going through the thoughtful process on why they’re in the position. What’s the target price for this position, what’s the stop loss for this position, etc.

So yes, we do see trading frequency, it’s news-driven. You’re a hundred percent right, not necessarily for better outcome. And the mistakes we’re seeing, it’s not different to any other news cycle, and that’s really to move away from the plan, the reason that someone got into a position and rather just get worried about the current year’s flow.

[00:14:31] Jeremy: And Bongani, I’m assuming that you are seeing a meaningful increase in trading frequency during this period of heightened volatility?

[00:14:39] Bongani: We certainly seeing quite a decent increase in trade and frequency, but it’s not uniform across all users, one could say, as myself and Tinus have been discussing earlier, we do have some of the more experienced traders who actually feel a little bit more comfortable, making those kind of decisions across periods of volatility.

Whereas other individuals or investors or long-term holding investors would prefer to wait and see how the market plays out in their favour.

Obviously, there would still be a lot more monitoring from their side because as Tinus did mention earlier, there’s quite a bit of news-driven narrative out there that are making people make hasty decisions, one would say, so a lot of the people who are inexperienced or the novice traders or investors obviously panic as soon as they hear that something is tanking or something’s dropping, or there’s some ridiculous news coming out there that shifts a specific industry.

The problem again with them is that their initial reaction is to get out immediately, as opposed to, as Tinus said, maybe, possibly just wait it out, figure out whether or not this is the position you want to hold, what’s your price point, when you’re going to get out.

So we do see increased activity from both sides, from experienced individuals and from the novice traders. However, there is something I want to stress though in terms of patience, because the distinction is quite important for an individual who’s wanting to hold a position versus somebody who’s immediately trying to get out because of a news-driven narrative.

And I said this distinction is quite important because it suggests a level of discipline. Increased awareness doesn’t always translate into increased action. In many cases, restraint is a healthy response. So, investors who tend to navigate volatile periods best are often the ones who stay well informed.

They reassess their positions, and they only act when something genuinely no longer aligns with their longer-term view.

[00:16:27] Jeremy: Tinus, there is a growing narrative around higher for longer interest rates and persistent inflation, you’ve both alluded to that. Are your users positioning for that reality assertively right now or still investing as if conditions will normalise quickly? And again, part of it is the crystal ball debate, I guess.

[00:16:49] Tinus: Yeah, I think we’ve definitely seen clients move some of their portfolios a bit more conservatively as the war in the Middle East began. And as you’ve seen and alluded to, the market has bounced off the lows and rallied hard.

And so some of our clients have definitely felt like they’ve missed out on some of the rally. Some of it has been to go into cash-like products as Bongani alluded to earlier. So yeah, we have seen it.

Clients are definitely positioning for this idea of high interest rates as inflation come through. Gone into a bit more defensive ETFs that doesn’t necessarily just give you, and I’ll talk about the S&P 500, for instance, but maybe more consumer defensive ETFs.

So yeah, we’ve seen it and clients are positioning for it. Are they too early?  Well, if the war’s over tomorrow, would that mean inflation will normalise sooner? Or this scare of inflation won’t come through as bad as everyone’s predicting it at the moment with the high energy prices. Again, that’s the crystal ball.

[00:17:47] Jeremy: So Tinus, lastly then, against that backdrop, how should a South African investor interpret global conflict risk in their local portfolio?

[00:17:56] Tinus: We are quite lucky to be at the South of Africa at the moment. It feels like, at least from a safety point of view, we’re well removed from it. But how do you look at your portfolio?

We have definitely seen it over the previous five years there was a massive flight into dollar assets and how clients invest internationally. But with the top 40 in the South African index doing so well last year, stellar returns, we have seen clients coming back to having a more local flavoured portfolio, making sure that that balance is right between local and offshore. And as I said earlier, good, diversified portfolio will weather the storm.

[00:18:36] Jeremy: That is where we are going to close off today’s episode of No Ordinary Wednesday. Tinus, Bongani, thank you so much for joining me.

A new episode of No Ordinary Wednesday drops every two weeks. To ensure that you don’t miss out, search for Investec Focus radio SA wherever you get your podcasts and hit the follow button.

Until next time, goodbye from me, Jeremy Maggs, and the entire Focus Radio team.

Disclaimer: Clarity by Investec is a service offering of Investec Bank Limited, an authorised financial services provider, and over the counter derivatives provider, a registered credit provider, NCRCP 9, and a member of the JSE Limited.

Ghost Bites (DRDGOLD | Jubilee Metals | Sibanye-Stillwater | Quantum Foods)

DRDGOLD’s quarterly update looks promising (JSE: DRD)

Gold production is now heading the right way

In recent times, DRDGOLD has been greatly assisted by a gold price that has been moving sharply in the right direction. Focusing on gold tailings is a tough business, as they have to process plenty of ore to extract any gold whatsoever. If yields drop, or if access to material becomes difficult, then DRDGOLD’s margins can come under significant pressure at lower gold prices.

Thankfully for the company, “lower gold prices” seem to be a thing of the past. In an operating update for the quarter ended March 2026, the quarter-on-quarter move in the average rand gold price was 13%. To be clear, “quarter-on-quarter” means we are comparing this quarter to the immediately preceding three months (i.e. to December 2025), not to the quarter ended March 2025 (which would be a year-on-year move).

A 13% jump in that price over just three months is juicy. And it would’ve been even juicier if gold sales had increased. Alas, there was actually a 6% decrease in gold sales despite a 6% increase in gold production. The announcement doesn’t go into detail on this unusual mismatch.

With higher production comes greater efficiencies. Cash operating costs per kilogram of gold decreased by 4%. This means that total cash operating costs increased by 5% vs. a revenue increase of 6%, leading to adjusted EBITDA jumping by 21% as they unlocked an increase in margin. Remember, even a small difference in growth rate between group revenue and expenses can do great things for the margin in a company like this.

Further good news can be found in the capital expenditure update, where there’s a 16% decrease in capex on a quarter-on-quarter basis. But it’s worth noting that capex has been at elevated levels over the past nine months, jumping from R1.2 billion to R2.3 billion on a year-on-year basis. They’ve been investing heavily in their key projects, a necessary step to secure production of gold. Capex has now peaked though, so the company will no doubt be relieved that the gold price supported them throughout the capex programme.

If you want to see what happens when the market washes away from you during a period of heightened capex, just look at names like Sappi (JSE: SAP) and Gemfields (JSE: GML).

To end off on DRDGOLD, the balance sheet looks fat and happy with cash of R2.3 billion (vs. R1.7 billion as at December 2025). Although they have debt facilities in place, the company is currently free of debt as they haven’t drawn down on them. This bodes well for dividends, with the share price closing 8.3% higher in response to this update.


Production is up at Jubilee Metals, but guidance is a mixed bag (JSE: JBL)

Production guidance is “under review” based on recent developments

Jubilee Metals has released an operational and production update for the nine months to March 2026. With total saleable copper production for the period up by 28.7%, they are making progress on their strategy.

Production at Roan more than doubled, up 112.8% from the comparative period. Commissioning of the expanded Roan copper concentrate facility is near completion.

At the Molefe Mine, although there was a significant increase in ore mined and transported to the Sable Refinery, the announcement talks about interim numbers rather than nine-month numbers. I’m not sure if that’s just a typo.

Production at the Sable Refinery increased by 27.4% year-on-year. This is why the jump at Roan was watered down to a group increase of 28.7%.

Guidance for the year is an unusual situation. The company notes that it is currently “under review”, but they don’t make it clear whether it will be going up or down. The positive factor is the fast tracking of the expanded stripping programme at Molefe Mine, expected to be completed by July 2026. The negative factor is the delay in the commissioning and ramp-up of the expanded concentrate dewatering circuit at Roan, with targeted production expected to be reached in May.

The issue isn’t whether Jubilee Metals is increasing its copper production. The debate is around whether they are increasing it quickly enough!

What are your thoughts on this company?


Quantum Foods flags double-digit growth (JSE: QFH)

This is despite a significant drop in average egg selling prices

People often talk about how food prices seem to head in one direction only. It certainly feels that way at the till for consumers, but the truth is that prices do sometimes go down.

In a trading statement dealing with the six months to March 2026, Quantum Foods noted that average egg selling prices fell by 9%. That’s good news for Eggs Benedict enthusiasts everywhere – like me!

Despite this, the company achieved HEPS growth of between 12% and 20%. The market would probably show some support for this if there was trade in the stock. Alas, liquidity is so thin that not a single share changed hands on the day.

As we’ve seen elsewhere in the poultry sector, the results were supported by important external factors like higher demand for poultry products in general, lower feed costs, and much less disruption from energy availability and avian influenza.

The egg business suffered a downturn in earnings as the price decrease more than offset the 4% increase in volumes. Thankfully, the feeds and broiler farming businesses registered an increase in earnings, while the layer farming business was stable. Earnings in the other African businesses are described as being significantly higher, with the exception of Mozambique.

It’s worth noting that head office costs increased in this period due to management incentivisation, so that’s something to look out for when the company releases detailed results on 22 May.


Things are going very well at Sibanye-Stillwater (JSE: SSW)

The latest quarterly update reflects incredible growth in earnings

With exposure to gold and PGMs as its primary commodities, Sibanye-Stillwater has enjoyed that rarest of rare things: an upswing in both commodity prices at the same time. At the right point in the cycle, these mining companies are basically a licence to print money.

In an operating update for the three months ended March 2026, Sibanye has delivered the incredibly happy news of a 371% spike in group adjusted EBITDA. Perhaps even more encouragingly, the positive contribution to earnings is across the group’s operations, rather than driven by just one area.

Prices have obviously played the major role here, with PGMs up 87% and gold up 49%. But you still need to get the stuff out of the ground, with a 2% increase in South African PGM production and stable local gold production. There was unfortunately a 5% decrease in production in the US PGM operations. Importantly, the US operation was profitable in this period, a huge swing from the losses seen a year ago.

In the recycling business, adjusted EBITDA jumped dramatically from under R200 million to nearly R1.6 billion. To put that in perspective, US PGM adjusted EBITDA was R777 million, or less than half of what they made from recycling. All of this pales in comparison to SA PGMs (R12.4 billion) and SA gold (R4.7 billion). It’s also worth touching on Century zinc, more than doubling year-on-year to R467 million.

The Keliber lithium project is an important strategic push by the business, with construction completed on schedule in this period. Negative adjusted EBITDA of R209 million is a feature of a development period – you have to spend money today in order to make money in future.

Trying to guess where these commodity prices will go is a risky game. There are myriad factors involved, ranging from jewellery demand in China (a key platinum driver) through to the more obvious stuff like catalytic converters and tariff risks. China is also a major factor in the lithium market, as are the supply and demand forces of AI-driven energy needs.

Sibanye can’t control external prices, but they can do their best to manage costs. Although all-in sustaining costs (AISC) per ounce was flat in the South African PGM business, it jumped by 15% in the South African gold business due to operating cost pressures and higher royalty taxes. The underground gold operations need to be managed carefully from a cost perspective.

The US PGM business needs to tighten up on costs, with AISC per ounce increasing by 14% year-on-year as production dipped. This is one of the hardest things about mining: when production falls, it’s a double-whammy as AISC inevitably increases and the margin per unit deteriorates.

With one quarter behind them, the company has left 2026 guidance unchanged. The share price closed 11.3% higher on the day.


Results of previous poll:


Nibbles:

  • Wesizwe Platinum (JSE: WEZ) is still trying to catch up on financial reporting and lift the suspension on the trading of its shares. They’ve released a trading statement dealing with the year ended December 2025, noting that HEPS swung from losses to profits – an increase of between 171% and 191%. The range is more useful than the percentage movement, with positive HEPS of between 8.64 cents and 11.08 cents. Results are due for release on 8 May.
  • Mantengu (JSE: MTU) has replaced the offtaker of its chrome. The legacy deal with RWE Supply & Trading seems to have had some difficult commercial terms around pricing, driving a negative impact on Mantengu’s numbers of R29 million in the previous interim period. The new deal with HMS Bergbau Africa (that sounds like the name of a ship!) has no such issue. Mantengu indicates that this commercial improvement should eliminate the recurrence of onerous terms, while delivering a route to market for Mantengu’s chrome.
  • ASP Isotopes (JSE: ISO) announced that subsidiary Quantum Leap Energy has further boosted its brains trust with the appointment of Dr. Peter Fiske to the strategic advisory board. Dr. Fiske comes with a long and impressive CV in the energy space in the US. It’s true that the company is being dressed up for its IPO, but it’s just as true that there is genuinely an incredible amount of talent in the organisation.

UNLOCK THE STOCK: CA Sales Holdings

Unlock the Stock is a platform designed to let retail investors experience life as a sell-side analyst.

Corporate management teams give a presentation and then we open the floor to an interactive Q&A session. I facilitate the Q&A alongside Mark Tobin of Coffee Microcaps and the team from Keyter Rech Investor Solutions.

We are grateful to the South African team from Lumi Global, who look after the webinar technology for us.

In the 70th edition of Unlock the Stock, CA Sales Holdings returned to the platform to talk about the recent numbers and the strategic outlook for the business.

Watch the recording here:

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