Spanish soccer federation chief Rubiales to stand trial for World Cup kiss, The Next Generation Of iPads, De Ruyter claims load shedding holiday is due to diesel burning, Best-performing JSE-listed tech companies, Police facing skills exodus, and How Gary Oldman made Slow Horses one of the best shows on TV.
Every time the world thought we were on the edge of destruction, we proved them wrong, and with middle fingers raised to the naysayers, we have managed to build the crown jewel of Africa.
NPA fails first State Capture case, Taylor Swift dressed for revenge, Dagga firm eyes JSE listing, Ramaphosa withdraws National Orders, and Meghan moans again.
Mention the word ‘Steinhoff’ and most of us think of former CEO Markus Jooste. The company’s former CFO isn’t without wrongdoing, either.
Naspers, which owns large stakes in South African companies like Media24, MultiChoice, and Takealot, has long been popular with those who dabble on the JSE.
Cape Town’s own stock exchange. WhatsApp’s massive fine. NZ supermarket attack. Alan Turing the gambler. German heist arrests. Em Rata’s runway return.
Wealth can be measured in a number of ways, one of which is by how much stock value you hold on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, or JSE.
Could JSE get Reddit treatment? Myanmar coup. Trump lawyers quit. Russia detains 5,000. SA vaccines arriving. Meghan fights back over name change.
Despite a grim outlook, 2021 looks to offer up some very decent investment options on the JSE. Find out which JSE stocks you should be eyeing in 2021.
The CEOs of big companies, even those who have had to take a bit of a pay cut, are still raking in extremely high salaries.
SA shares skyrocket. US sanctions. TikTok banned. Hamilton wants R850m a year. Red light district’s return.
Whilst some companies have seen their stock rise over the last (almost) five months, others have taken knocks that will be felt for many years to come.
Earlier this morning, Prosus listed publicly on the Amsterdam Euronext exchange, as well as the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE).
Experts agree that the poor state of the JSE can be traced back to China and America’s trade war, with August looking like a particularly bad month.
In the past week alone, 45 out of the 164 companies listed fell to their lowest levels in a year. Where some see disaster, others see opportunity.
In the midst of South Africa’s weakest economic environment in a decade, one publicly-listed company has seen consistently stellar results.
The case of Tongaat Hulett, like Steinhoff, shows that the bigger they are, the harder they fall.
Later this year, the New York Stock Exchange will welcome the first listing of an African technology company valued at more than $1 billion.
Slowly but surely, we are leaving the dumpster fire that was 2018 behind. For some of South Africa’s best-known companies, though, the woes have followed them.
Deloitte has published its annual Executive Compensation Report, and South Africa has been labelled the “most unequal country in the world”.
New World Wealth has just published its South African Wealth Report for 2018, revealing that many South African’s are sitting very pretty.
You know you’re doing something right when you can spend R52 million on expanding your empire, so this father and son duo can be pretty proud.
Since Cyril Ramaphosa was voted in as president of the ANC, the rand has rallied back against the dollar. A number of local share prices are rocketing, too.
It hasn’t exactly been a stellar few months for prominent South African companies and their share values, but one of our own is quietly turning itself into a big hitter.
South Africa’s JSE has outperformed the rest of the world for the past 117 years, and the reason for this means there’s plenty more room for other players. Like you.
Scores dead in three Germany attacks. JSE’s R98billion error. Billionaire dies after record divorce settlement. Clinton picks VP. EFF selling private land. Pokemon Go border incident. War vets turn on Mugabe. Kim parties with Calvin. Lohan’s finance tried to kill her.
The insurer is being investigated by the FSB on account of insider trading information, but they aren’t the only ones. Let’s lay out the basics.
If we learnt one thing from the ‘Weekend Finance Minister’ fiasco it’s that the market doesn’t react well to uncertainty. Trouble is brewing.
It appears there is money to be made (and loads of it) in the storage business, with one local company making history yesterday.
JSE plummeting. North Korean soldier escapes, kills 4. They think they found Air Asia plane tail. Family lost 7 on Air Asia flight. Euro hits 9-year low. NY son kills hedge fund dad over allowance. Rudy Huxtable won’t call Bill Cosby.