Market View
J200 106,442.00 +3.46% J203 114,313.00 +3.17% J210 125,506.00 +4.78% J211 128,726.00 +2.30% J212 25,224.00 +3.12% J213 139,878.00 +2.73%
Winning Shares (Top 5)
Code Name Added Price Latest % Gain % Gain/Year
SUR SPURCORP 2023-08-08 2488 4147 +66.68% +25.35%
ADH ADVTECH 2023-08-14 1975 3989 +101.97% +39.02%
CGR CALGRO-M3 2023-08-15 356 460 +29.21% +11.19%
CAA CA-SALES 2023-08-25 775 1375 +77.42% +29.97%
CPI CAPITEC 2023-11-04 185496 424730 +128.97% +53.98%
Opinions (Top 5)
Code Name Date Action
HET HERIOT 2026-03-26 View

Heriot (HET) is a real estate investment trust (REIT) which owns a diverse portfolio of 44 properties worth R4,827bn in retail, industrial, commercial and specialist property. It was listed on the Alt-X of the JSE on 24-7-2017 but has hardly traded since then. They are developing a property in Adderley Street in Cape Town into 215 residential units.

It also owns 48,7% of Safari (SAR). In its results for the six months to 31st December 2025 the company reported distributable earnings up 16% and headline earnings per share (HEPS) up 76,6%. Revenue was up 3,1% and the net asset value (NAV) rose 20,7% to 2289,64c per share. This share is hamstrung by its lack of volume traded, which makes it completely impractical for a private investor.

REM REMGRO 2026-03-26 View

Johann Rupert's Remgro (REM) is an investment holding company which owns 28,2% of Rand Merchant Bank Holdings (RMH) and 3,9% of Firstrand. But that is not Remgro's only investment. It also owns Mediclinic, an international healthcare company with divisions in Switzerland, Southern Africa and United Arab Emirates which has now been delisted from the JSE.

Remgro recently sold its 25,8% stake in the London-listed Unilever Group for R4,9bn in cash plus the Unilever spreads business in Southern Africa. This gave it ownership of brands like Flora and Rama and other spreads. In its foods division it also owns 31,8% of Distell and 77,2% of RCL Foods (where the Unilever spreads division may be housed in a new subsidiary called "Silver 2017").

Under insurance, Remgro owns 29,9% of RMI. It owns a number of other investments including a 23,1% stake in Grindrod and a 30% stake in Seacom. The Competition Tribunal has approved the acquisition by Community Investment Ventures Holdings (CIVH), a Remgro subsidiary, of Vumatel.

Vumatel is a "last mile" fibre infrastructure company. In terms of the approval, Vumatel must supply free uncapped fibre services to schools near where it's networks pass for the next 10 years. On 2nd December 2020 Remgro announced that it is planning to increase its stake in RCL Foods at a cost of R805m.

The company has the intention of getting into the electricity generation business to supply its own businesses because it believes that Eskom can no longer be relied upon. In its results for the six months to 31st December 2025 the company reported headline earnings per share (HEPS) up 38,5% and net asset value (NAV) up 1,6% to 29703c per share.

The company said, "The Group is directly exposed to the Middle East through Mediclinic Holdings Limited's (Mediclinic) market-leading healthcare operations in the United Arab Emirates, the prospects of which are closely linked to the ongoing stability and prosperity of the region. More broadly the impact of the conflict introduces risks to global asset prices".

While the Iran war has had a negative impact on the share price, this is a very high-quality blue chip which should be accumulated on weakness. Technically, the share made a low at 8388c on 7th September 2020 and has been in a strong rising trend since. It is currently trading at 18574c on a P:E of 13,38.

We see further upside potential in the share.

KP2 KORE 2026-03-26 View

Kore (KP2) is a potash mining company which owns 97% of Sintoukola Potash which has the Kola and Dougou (DX) mining leases in the Congo. Kola has a resource of 508m tons and Dougou has a resource of 1,1 billion tons of lower grade material. On 29th January 2019, the company announced the completion of a definitive feasibility study (DFS) done by a consortium of French engineering companies.

The DFS showed an internal rate of return (IRR) of 17% at a price of $350 to $360 per ton generating a free cash flow of about $500m per annum. The average operating cost is under $62 per ton. The targeted production of 2,2m tons per annum gives the mine a 33-year life. In its results for the year to 31st December 2025 the company reported total comprehensive income was $19,926,064 with cash and cash equivalents of $10,555,176 as at 31 December 2025.

The company made a headline loss of 0,02c (US) compared with a loss of 0,03c in the previous period. The company said, "The Directors prepared a cash flow forecast for the period ending 31 March 2027, which indicates that the Group will not have sufficient liquidity to meet its working capital requirements to the end of the going concern period (March 2027)". Obviously, this is a risky penny stock because it is mining a commodity in the Congo, and it is not producing yet.

The share has become a speculative win on occasions for investors. We added it to the Winning Shares List (WSL) on 16th May 2024 at 20c and it has since risen as high as 99c (19-9-25) before declining to 73c at the end of March 2026. It remains speculative. 

DCP DIS-CHEM 2026-03-26 View

Dis-Chem Pharmacies (DCP) listed in November 2016 and competes directly with Clicks (CLS) in the pharmaceutical, medicine and beauty products markets. It is a family business run by the Saltzman family who had a controlling stake in the business through a private company, Ivlyn. On 24th August 2021 Ivlyn announced the sale of 7,5% of its shares in a bookbuild, 3,75% to selected management (with a 10-year lock-in) and 10,5% to a BEE consortium.

This left the Saltzman family's interest at 31.4% which has subsequently been reduced to 29,31%. Ivan Saltzman was the CEO, but has resigned and will be replaced by Rui Morais. Dischem's objective on listing was to expand its store base from 108 stores, which it has now far surpassed.

Theoretically, Dischem can have a store in every shopping mall where Clicks has a store. Clicks had about six hundred stores when Dischem was listed and has spoken of plans to expand its store base to as many as 1200. This means that Dischem has considerable "blue sky" potential - which accounts for its relatively high rating (P:E of around 24).

The company is buying Springbok Pharmacy and Quenets which shows that it is growing rapidly. The company is opening between 10 and 20 new stores a year. At 28th February 2025 the company had 2285 pharmacies and 45 baby stores. It may be possible for the company to expand into spaces left in malls as a result of COVID-19.

These may be available for lower rentals. The company is benefiting from an increased awareness among customers of the need to boost their immunity and general health by buying more vitamins. The company is expanding into healthcare insurance with the acquisition of 25% of Kaelo Holdings.

In its results for the six months to 31st August 2025 the company reported revenue up 8,7% and headline earnings per share (HEPS) up 9%. The company said, "During the six months to 31 August 2025, 17 retail pharmacy stores were opened, resulting in 302 retail pharmacy stores and 44 retail baby stores as at 31 August 2025".

In a trading update for the period from 1st September 2025 to 16th February 2026 the company reported group revenue up 10,1% and retail revenue up 9,5%. The company said, "We experienced a solid trading performance during the period, notably on the back of the launch of our reimagined loyalty programme, Better Rewards, which launched on 21 October 2025".

In our view, this is a solid blue-chip company with a good future. Technically, the share moved sideways and downward since making a long-term "triple top" with peaks in January 2018, April 2022 and November 2024. It is now moving up again, and has just broken above the long-term resistance at 3750c per share.

We consider Dischem to be a solid defensive share with good long-term potential, but it has shown itself to be technically volatile. on 25th March 2026 Business Day reported on a "wave of sales" of Dischem shares by the Saltzman family which may indicate a change in control in the longer term. 

GPL GRANPRADE 2026-03-26 View

Grand Parade Investments (GPL) is an investment holding company with interests in the gaming industry. The company is a BEE company which was listed on the JSE in 2008. It decided to terminate its Dunkin' Doughnuts and Baskin Robbins franchises in February 2019 and Burger King in February 2020.

It had sold its remaining 10% in the Spur Corporation back to Spur in June 2019. On 15th June 2022, the company announced that it had unbundled its 9,28% shareholding in Spur on the basis that shareholders in GPL received 1 Spur share for every 56 GPL shares that they held on Friday 10th June 2022 (the unbundling record date).

In its results for the six months to 31st December 2025 the company reported an R8,8m drop in its net after tax profits with headline earnings per share (HEPS) falling to 8,8c from 10,8c in the previous period. The company said, "Cash and cash equivalents at the end of December 2025 amounted to R128.1 million, placing the Group in a positive net cash position".  Technically, the share has been moving sideways since 2017 and needs to break above resistance at 383c to become interesting.

While it has moved down over the last six months it appears to be stuck in a further consolidation. It does not, in our view, represent a particularly interesting investment opportunity. 

Winning Share: SUR
Opinion: GPL
Boots on the Ground  (2026-03-23)

The news from various sources that the US is preparing to send thousands of marines and large quantities of military hardware to the Middle East is unsettling markets around the world. Combined with Iran’s efforts to disable oil production in adjacent countries in the Persian Gulf, these 2 factors…

The news from various sources that the US is preparing to send thousands of marines and large quantities of military hardware to the Middle East is unsettling markets around the world. Combined with Iran’s efforts to disable oil production in adjacent countries in the Persian Gulf, these 2 factors have caused the S&P500 to fall 1,5% on Friday last week and brought it closer to a correction (generally accepted as 10% below the high point). 

The evidence is that Trump and America are getting ready to put boots on the ground in Iran with the idea of the protecting shipping passing through the Strait of Hormuz. The Iranian coastlines on the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman will be very difficult to control and protect because they are overlooked by the Zagros mountains and the Central Iranian range. These mountains, which have many cave systems, will be ideal cover from which small groups of Iranian commandos can constantly harass the invaders in the coming months.  

In these troubled times the JSE Overall index has so far fallen 14,3% - twice as much as the 7,2% fall in the S&P500. This is as you would expect given that South Africa is a leading emerging market and our currency reflects the general worldwide shift towards risk-off. The imminent rise in our petrol price on 1st April could be as much as 25% or R5 per litre. This will push our inflation rate up and probably cause local interest rates to rise.

What is surprising in this scenario is that markets and especially Wall Street have not fallen further. This is because the tech companies in the US are still attracting enormous investor interest and there has been substantial “buying of the dips”. The general opinion of overseas analysts is that shares will bounce back from this correction before the end of this year.

Is this a reasonable assumption? In our view the short answer to the question is, “Yes”. Trump is well known for backing down and not sticking to anything when the pressure on him rises. In this case he is already coming under enormous pressure from both external sources and internally where his popularity has never been as low. With the mid-term elections due in November, he must be increasingly aware of the dire consequences of losing both the House and the Senate.  If he puts boots on the ground in Iran now, he will certainly still be getting a steady flow of body bags back from Iran by November. And we believe it is unlikely that his efforts will make the Strait of Hormuz safe for shipping. But he is Trump and therefore totally unpredictable.

In these troubled times, there are relatively few companies which are not touched in some way by what is happening in the Middle East, and especially by the rising oil price. Mobile Telephone Networks or MTN as it is known is one of those companies. It describes itself as a “...pan-African mobile operator with the strategic intent of leading digital solutions for Africa's progress”.

In its most recent results for the year to 31st December 2025 the company reported service revenue up 22,9% and data revenue up 37,7%. Fintech revenue rose 30% and the company reported a 5,6% increase in total customers to 307,2 million.

Technically, the share was in a sideways market from March 2024 until the beginning of 2025. It then entered a strong new upward trend. Consider the chart:

MTN (MTN) : March 2024 - 20th of March 2026. Chart by ShareFriend Pro.

We added MTN to the Winning Shares List (WSL) on 15th January 2025 at a price of 9729c. Since then, it has risen to 19155c – or about 88%. While it has certainly felt some of the fall-out from the Iran war, its business is in Africa which should be largely unaffected.

So, we see this sell-off on the JSE as a buying opportunity to pick up high-quality shares at bargain prices. MTN is one of those shares, but others include Clicks which has now fallen even further due Trump’s war, but which was already heavily oversold.

Buying shares at a time like this can be scary, but remember our maxim:

“If you don’t feel the risk, then you are probably not going to make any money”.

Your ultimate protection in all of this is, of course, as always, your stop-loss strategy.  

The Strait of Hormuz  (2026-03-16)

Are we teetering on the edge of a major bear trend? After Friday the 13th of March 2026's S&P500 close at 6632, Wall Street is now down 5% from its all-time record closing high of 6978.6 on the 27th of January 2026. This down-move is similar to the 5% correction which occurred in the first three…

Are we teetering on the edge of a major bear trend? After Friday the 13th of March 2026's S&P500 close at 6632, Wall Street is now down 5% from its all-time record closing high of 6978.6 on the 27th of January 2026. This down-move is similar to the 5% correction which occurred in the first three weeks of November last year and it is evident that there is still considerable bullish sentiment in Wall Street, just waiting for their moment to buy the dip .

Into this mix, Oracle (ORCL) delivered strong Q3 FY2026 results on March 10, 2026, beating estimates with $17.2 billion in revenue, driven by a 243% surge in AI infrastructure demand. This demonstrates that the underlying strength of the AI boom in the US is still alive and well. If the war situation in Iran can be resolved, it is clear that the stock market will continue up to new record highs very quickly. Consider the chart:

S&P500 Index : 17th of October 2025 - 13th of March 2026. Chart by ShareFriend Pro.

The chart shows the November correction and what some technicians are now suggesting is a head-and-shoulders formation. In our view, the formation is not particularly convincing, but after Friday’s move there can be no doubt that the index has broken strongly down.

Most of the problem comes from the jump in the oil price which has seen North Sea Brent rise to above $100. This is very good for Russia and Putin, while being very bad for Trump. The US Secretary for Defence, Pete Hegseth, seems to think that the problem is easily solvable, but we believe that it may be extremely difficult.    

Normally, about 20% of the world’s oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz. This narrow sea passage is relatively easy to attack and control, and it is Iran’s only strong pressure point in its war with Israel and America. Its navy and air force have now been systematically eliminated by strategic bombing. The new leader of Iran, Mojtaba Khamenei, has specifically said that he will not allow any ships to pass through and that he will use the rising oil price to put pressure on Trump.

The problem is that to open the Strait will require boots on the ground in Iran. The Israeli/US forces will have to clear a corridor at least 30km wide along the Iranian coast adjacent to the Strait to prevent the firing of missiles and drones against passing ships. They cannot do this from the air. Having boots on the ground means incurring casualties.

Trump probably began this war in order to draw attention away from his problems with the Epstein files. He has however landed himself with a new problem – the rising price of petrol in America. His approval ratings have fallen to an all-time low and the November mid-term elections are looming large. The price of petrol has risen by 20% since the start of the war. On the other hand, his tax cuts will begin to impact in April resulting in refund cheques being paid after the tax-filing season ends.

On Feb. 7, 2026, Chasity Verret Martinez won a special election to fill a vacant seat in the Louisiana House. Martinez is a Democrat who took 62% of the vote in a district that had given Donald Trump a 13-percentage-point victory in the 2024 presidential race. And her win came a week after Democrats seized a Texas Senate district that had supported Trump even more strongly.

While these results are not conclusive, they are a strong indication that the Republicans will lose their control of the House and may even lose the Senate in November. Trump knows that, if he loses both Houses, he could easily be looking at impeachment – so suddenly control over the shipping passing through the Strait of Hormuz becomes critical.

How should you as a private investor respond to this situation? Our advice is not to panic but to monitor your stop-loss levels closely and act on them when broken. We believe that the situation will be resolved and that some degree of normalcy will return sooner or later. When and if that happens, we expect stocks around the world to bounce.

The Iran Correction  (2026-03-09)

Trump’s decision to bomb Iran and kill the Supreme Leader of over 200 million Shia Moslems was taken without the consideration and approval of Congress and without the cooperation of other Western countries. It is the typical act of a dictator and has embroiled America in what looks like an…

Trump’s decision to bomb Iran and kill the Supreme Leader of over 200 million Shia Moslems was taken without the consideration and approval of Congress and without the cooperation of other Western countries. It is the typical act of a dictator and has embroiled America in what looks like an unplanned war situation. This may prove to be very difficult to conclude on any reasonable basis, and especially without a significant cost both in money and American lives.

Combined with other disturbing economic data, this has taken Wall Street out of the sideways pattern that it has been in since late last year and put it into a correction. The S&P500 index has so far fallen 3,4% from its all-time record high of 6978.6 on 27th January 2026. Consider the chart:

S&P500 Index: 4th of November 2025 - 6th of March 2026. Chart by ShareFriend Pro.

Part of the problem is the increasingly negative data coming out of the US economy, especially in the labour market. The most recent US jobs report showed that the US economy lost 92 000 jobs in February 2026.

Disturbingly, the steadily deteriorating monthly jobs numbers are an indication either that either the economy may be headed into recession or that the spread of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies is putting a large number of Americans out of work. Consider this chart published on Friday last week by CNBC:

Monthly job creation in the US: 2022 - March 2026. Available at:

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/06/february-2026-jobs-report.html

This shows a pattern of falling job creation going back to the beginning of 2022 and becoming steadily more negative in recent months. Combined with this, the unemployment rate has also been edging up and came in at 4,4% in February. This is somewhat higher than the unemployment rates below 4% which characterised the end of Joe Biden’s presidency, painting a concerning picture.

In our view, the productivity benefits of new technologies like AI should, in the medium term, more than compensate for the inevitable loss of jobs. In effect, the US economy is adjusting rapidly to a radically disruptive force which is reshaping the business environment and causing a sharp re-allocation of capital. Some businesses will benefit and others will disappear for ever.

In the longer term, once the dust settles, the economy should emerge stronger and that is why we believe that this is probably a correction rather than a new bear trend – but you will notice that what looks like a correction right now could develop into a head-and-shoulders formation if the record high of 6978.6 on the S&P is not broken when the market recovers.

At the moment, the positive news coming out of the tech sector is being off-set by the bad news on the political front and Trump’s war in Iran. If we are lucky, the war in Iran will be resolved on some basis - probably because he will probably back down in the face of increasing pressure both at home and abroad. If this happens in a relatively short time, the market will turn its attention back to the rapid progress of new technologies and hopefully recover to make a further new all-time record high in due course.

JSE Top 40

106,442.00 (+3.46%)

All Share

114,313.00 (+3.17%)

Financial 15

25,224.00 (+3.12%)

J200
J203
J212
Top Gainers
# Code Name Close (c) % move
1 SSK STEFSTOCK 529 +8.18%
2 JBL JUBILEE 82 +7.89%
3 SEP SEPHAKU 205 +7.33%
Top Losers
# Code Name Close (c) % move
1 AII AIMIA 0 +0.00%
2 BAC AFBITCOIN 850 -15.00%
3 SZK SABKABILI 3000 -11.76%

Top Movers – Charts

Top Gainer: SSK
Top Loser: AII