Market View
J200 107,510.00 -0.42% J203 115,427.00 -0.34% J210 124,670.00 -1.71% J211 128,980.00 +0.65% J212 25,856.00 -0.10% J213 142,124.00 +0.30%
Winning Shares (Top 5)
Code Name Added Price Latest % Gain % Gain/Year
SRI SUPR 2025-02-25 1704 1857 +8.98% +7.19%
ORN ORIONMIN 2026-01-07 27 29 +7.41% +19.31%
CPP COLLINS 2024-05-23 840 1122 +33.57% +16.69%
RES RESILIENT 2024-06-19 4842 8292 +71.25% +36.78%
DCP DIS-CHEM 2026-01-08 3574 3819 +6.86% +18.00%
Opinions (Top 5)
Code Name Date Action
ISA ISA 2026-05-28 View

ISA Holdings (ISA) is a small Alt-X listed IT company offering network, internet, and information security in sub-Saharan Africa. The company claims to employ some of the leading IT security specialists and to have the tools and experience to offer effective information security solutions.

In its results for the year to 28th February 2026 the company reported revenue up 9% and headline earnings per share (HEPS) up 10%. The company said, "Profit before other income and expenses increased by 14% during the current reporting period to R64.2 million, from R56.1 million in the prior reporting period, representing a healthy gross margin of 50%, compared to 48% in the prior reporting period". This looks like a good quality IT company that is profitable but has gone through a tough time.

The problem is that the share is thinly traded with only about R50 000 worth of shares changing hands on average each day. This makes it risky for private investors to buy a meaningful number of shares, however, on a P:E of 11,93 and a dividend yield of 9,94% the shares look like good value.

It was added to the Winning Shares List (WSL) on 8th February 2024 at 140c per share. It has subsequently moved up to 210c (27-5-26).

TKG TELKOM 2026-05-28 View

Historically, Telkom (TKG) was the government-controlled provider of fixed line telephone connectivity in South Africa. With the advent of cell phones, Telkom was forced to subsidise the development of its own competition in the form of Vodacom, MTN and more recently Cell-C. This subsidy takes the form of termination rates for calls which are now being phased out.

Over the past twenty years, the CEO of Telkom, Sipho Maseko, says that Telkom has effectively subsidised other networks to the tune of R70bn. Telkom is currently listed and is owned 41% by the government and 11,9% by the Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF) - so it could still be considered to be government-controlled.

In reality, it operates as an independent organisation divided into 5 divisions. (1) Open Serve is South Africa's primary supplier of wholesale connectivity with the country's largest network. (2) Telkom Consumer is the largest supplier of broad-band internet connectivity with a growing mobile phone network.

(3) Yellow Pages provides advertising and marketing to local businesses. (4) BCX is an ICT solutions company operating in Southern Africa. (5) Swiftnet" was formed in April 2018 to house Telkom's masts, towers, and property interests. Swiftnet owns a diverse portfolio of 1330 properties and has 40 ear-marked for development.

Of course, Telkom is impacted by the ruling of the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa's (ICASA) decisions regarding the so-called "inter-connect" fees. However, in our opinion, Telkom has been well managed, and its downsizing should result in improved profitability going forward.

This company is steadily switching from fixed-line to mobile. On 22nd March 2024 the company announced that they had sold Swiftnet for R6,75bn to a consortium of investors. The cash will be used to reduce Telkom's debt. In its results for the six months to 30th September 2025 the company reported revenue up 3,4% and headline earnings per share (HEPS) up 16,4%.

The company said, "Adjusted H1 FY2025 (prior period) financial measures exclude the impact of the R160 million restructuring cost, and the Telkom Retirement Fund derecognition loss of R618 million in continuing operations." In a trading update for the 3 months to 31st December 2025 the company reported data revenue up 9,6% with mobile service revenue up 7,2%. The company said, "Mobile subscribers exceeded 25 million.

Mobile data subscribers increased by 29.3% to 19.3 million, due to tailored value-focused plans. Fibre connectivity rate robust at 52.4% and homes connected increased to 786 490". In a trading statement for the year to 31st March 2026 the company estimated that HEPS would increase by between 45% and 55%.

Technically, Telkom's share fell from highs of around R98 in June 2019 to levels around R15.00 in March 2020. It has now entered a new upward trend and it was added to the Winning Shares List (WSL) on 16th November 2024 at 2884c. It has since risen to 6661c (27-5-26). The latest results and the special dividend from the sale of Swiftnet have boosted the share's price.

In our view, this company is battling to find a new direction in a recovering economy and against stiff competition, but the latest results are positive.

RNI REINET 2026-05-28 View

Reinet (RNI) is an investment holding company whose main asset for many years was a stake in British American Tobacco (BAT). In its financial results for the year to 31st March 2026 the company reported a net asset value (NAV) of 36,31 euros, down from the previous year's figure of 38,04 eruos.

The  company said, "Ordinary and special dividends received from Pension Insurance Corporation Group Limited during the year amounted to EUR 303 million - Reinet sold 100 per cent of its holding in Pension Insurance Corporation Group Limited to Athora Holding Ltd for proceeds of some EUR 3.3 billion". The share, which acts as a rand-hedge due to its euro-denominated assets, fell from a high of R343 in February 2020 to a low of R246 in March 2020 as a result of COVID19.

A technical breakout above its long-term downward trendline occurred on 16 September 2019 at R270. On 27th May 2026 the share fell heavily on its latest results but remains in a long-term upward trend. Investors should consider the rand’s prospects when evaluating this stock, but we believe it represents good value at current levels.

SYG SYGNIA 2026-05-28 View

Sygnia (SYG) describes itself as a "specialist financial services group". It is South Africa's largest provider of exchange traded funds (ETF) and has a number of unit trusts. The company has R217,7bn under management and appears to be taking market share away from other asset managers.

Sygnia Itrix makes it possible for Sygnia to attract funds looking for offshore exposure. The fact that Sygnia was able to increase assets under management during such a challenging time, indicates that it has caught the attention of fund managers. The company's revenue is a function of its ability to continue to attract funds for management.

We believe that this company could be quite similar to Coronation in early 2012 - when that company was relatively cheap and subsequently grew four-fold. In its results for the year to 30th September 2025 the company reported revenue up 12,8% and headline earnings per share (HEPS) up 8,5%.

The company said, "Our retail business is a key growth driver and has attracted net inflows of R3.8bn for the 2025 financial year (2024: R3.1bn). Sygnia’s retail AUM increased to R90.4bn from R74.7bn in the prior year". In a trading statement for the six months to 31st March 2026 the company estimated that HEPS would increase by between 20% and 25%.

Technically, the share has been in an upward trend since COVID in March 2020. We see that upward trend as continuing. On a P:E of 13,08 and a dividend yield (DY) of 5,69% it still looks like good value.  

EMI EMIRA 2026-05-28 View

Emira Property (EMI) is a real estate investment trust (REIT) which has substantial exposure to the South African economy through its office properties. It owns the prestigious Knightsbridge office park in Bryanston. It has a new CEO in the form of Geoff Jennett and the business has been improving consistently since he took over.

It has about R760m of overseas exposure mostly to outdoor shopping malls in America and a further R918m in Growthpoint Australia - but most of its exposure is still here in South Africa. It owns 35% of Transcend, a South African residential fund. It has reduced its office exposure from 35,7% to 25%.

It is dependent on improvements in the South African economy. It recently reduced its holding of B- and C-grade offices by selling twenty-five of them to Shankly Property Investments (controlled by Sandile Zungu) for R1,8bn. This has freed up cash which has been invested in retail shopping centres in America.

In its results for the year to 31st March 2026 the company reported a loan-to-value (LTV) of 30,2% and a net asset value (NAV) of 2094,9c per share. The company said, "Distributable income for FY26 is R648,1m compared to R642,2m for the prior year". Technically, the share entered a new upward trend in November 2023 which is still in progress - but has been slightly interrupted by the war in Iran.

Winning Share: RES
Opinion: EMI
Southern Sun Hotels  (2026-05-25)

The Hotel business was probably the worst hit of all sectors during the pandemic in 2020. With the travel restrictions and the various difficulties aimed at preventing the spread of the disease, many business people simply elected to stay at home and conduct meetings on Zoom or Skype. Conventions of…

The Hotel business was probably the worst hit of all sectors during the pandemic in 2020. With the travel restrictions and the various difficulties aimed at preventing the spread of the disease, many business people simply elected to stay at home and conduct meetings on Zoom or Skype. Conventions of various sorts which are major business for hotels also stopped almost completely. Gradually, over the proceeding years the situation has steadily improved, and occupancy rates have climbed back.

From an investor’s viewpoint, the hotel industry offers a very secure and relatively unexciting investment. It has a substantial investment in land and buildings and it has a large staff contingent. In normal times, it can be expected to grow steadily as the economy grows. It remains sensitive to political risk and economic external shocks.

Southern Sun Hotels (SSU) was spun out of Tsogo Sun (TSG) and separately listed on 12th June 2019 – immediately before COVID-19. The share opened at 400c and quickly rose to 460c. It was always expected to be a solid well-traded institutional counter. As the pandemic gained momentum, the share collapsed, eventually reaching an intra-day low of 102c on 23rd March 2020.

At that point it was trading well below its net asset value (NAV), clearly under-priced given its huge property asset base and potential. Slowly, as investors began to realise that the pandemic was past its worst levels and that a vaccine would be produced, they looked around for bargains in the market and SSU was an obvious candidate. Consider the chart:

Southern Sun Hotels (SSU) : January 2020 - 22nd May 2026. Chart by ShareFriend Pro.

You can see here the impact of the pandemic on the newly-listed SSU. At the time we always said that COVID would result in a V-bottom and therefore a buying opportunity precisely because it was a black swan event and its effects would not last. In our article published on 13th March 2020 we said, “...my expectation is that we will see a “V-bottom” in the chart...” SSU (together with many blue chip shares) moved sideways at its worst level for about year and then began to recover.

Then in February 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine and the share price collapsed again – but this time not as badly as during COVID, which was by that time already fully discounted. The subsequent recovery was slow and steady. We finally added the share to the Winning Shares List (WSL) on 17th May 2024 at a price of 555c, but a more adventurous investor might easily have bought it much earlier and at lower levels.

The chart also shows the impact of Trump’s tariffs which initially caused a significant sell-off and, more recently this year, his war with Iran. Both of these events offered private investors further solid buying opportunities, especially for a relatively low-risk share like SSU.

In its results for the year to 31st March 2026 the company reported income up 9% and headline earnings per share (HEPS) up 20%. The company said, "Trading momentum increased in the second half of the year, with broad-based improvements across all regions underpinned by major international conferences and events including the G20 in Gauteng and improved transient demand in South Africa."

Since we added the share to the WSL it has risen 80% in two years. We believe it will continue to perform well as the economic reforms of the government of national unity (GNU) begin to eliminate or at least reduce some of the absurdities in the South African economy. The November municipal elections at the end of this year are likely to increase and consolidate the DA’s grip on the GNU making this effect more pronounced.

Exponential Bull Trend  (2026-05-18)

The current bull trend, in our opinion, began in 2009 from the low point on the S&P500 index of 676 reached on 9th March of that year. It has now been going on for over 17 years – making it the longest bull trend in the history of Wall Street by far. On Thursday, May 14, 2026, the S&P 500 closed at…

The current bull trend, in our opinion, began in 2009 from the low point on the S&P500 index of 676 reached on 9th March of that year. It has now been going on for over 17 years – making it the longest bull trend in the history of Wall Street by far.

On Thursday, May 14, 2026, the S&P 500 closed at a new all-time record high of 7,501 and the Dow Jones Industrial index went back above 50 000. This means the market has gone up 11-fold over the past 17 years. The question which investors have to ask themselves is, “How much further up can it go?” – and nobody really knows the answer to that question.

The historical price:earnings ratio (P:E) of the S&P500 is now just under 32 – which is well above its average level, but this does not necessarily mean that it cannot go higher. The fundamentals driving the 500 shares which make up the index are a direct function of their perceived future earnings and their potential to increase those earnings even further.

This in turn is a function of the on-going impact of new technologies like AI, and humanoid robotics on productivity levels. The problem is that during a protracted bull trend like this one, markets tend to become over-enthusiastic about that future potential, to the point where they begin to create their own momentum. Then share prices can begin to lose touch with the underlying profitability of the companies which they represent – and Wall Street is certainly moving in that direction.

A similar situation arose in the 1920’s when the new technologies of the motor car and the telephone began to become ubiquitous. These technologies impacted the profitability of all companies big and small giving rise to the “Roaring Twenties”. As Wikipedia puts it, “...the decade was characterized by economic prosperity, rapid social and cultural change, and a mood of exuberant optimism.

The problem is that investors tend to push share prices up so high that their potential to produce concomitant profits becomes irrelevant to investors. In other words, the investors get carried away in the excitement and bid shares up to absurd and unsustainable levels. Eventually a “bigger fool” point is reached where investors buy a share, not because of its earnings potential, but because a bigger fool will buy it back from them in a few weeks for even more money. The inevitable result is a 1929-style crash.

So, we need to ask, “Is Wall Street at a similar position now?” We believe it is getting there, but not yet. The new technologies are certainly impacting profitability across the board but the upward trend has not yet become crazy. It is still linked to future profits. So, we believe that Wall Street is still at a relatively early stage in this process and that the bull trend will continue for quite a while, getting steadily more and more excessive.

Our view is that the profitability gains flowing from AI are only just beginning. We are expecting far greater gains in the future. In our view America and the world is at much the same point that it was at, say, in 1923 or thereabouts, just when the Roaring Twenties were just getting going.

Sometimes it is useful to step back from the immediate excitement of the latest all-time record highs to look at the big picture. Consider the following chart which shows the progress of the S&P500 index since the start of this great bull trend 17 years ago:

S&P500 Index : November 2008 - 15th of May 2026. Chart by ShareFriend Pro.

The chart shows the progress of the S&P500 index since March 2009. You can see there the low point of 676 followed by a very gentle upward slope until about 2016. Thereafter, the gradient increased, but not very much and it was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Bear in mind that we regard COVID-19 as an aberration, not directly related to the stock market from a technical point of view. After that came the war in Ukraine which held the market back for a time, but since then the market has been accelerating despite Trump’s two interventions. What you can see from this chart is that the market is definitely becoming exponential. It is going up faster and faster. The move from 7000 on the S&P to 8000 is definitely quicker than the move from 6000 to 7000. The chart is rising almost vertically now.

And we can only imagine where the S&P500 would be now if the Brent oil price was still at around $70 per barrel instead of close to $110. Trump’s war in the Middle East has had the effect of temporarily cooling markets, but it has been insufficient to dampen the tidal wave of investor enthusiasm for the “blue sky” potential of AI and related technologies.

It is always fun to participate in the final stages of a great bull market, but you must be aware that nothing goes up forever. Your best protection against the coming bear, whenever it happens, is to maintain a strict stop-loss strategy on all your share investments. Remember, it is acceptable to widen your stop-loss percentages when your investments are strongly in-the-money, but you can never lose sight of the fact that at some unpredictable date in the future the market will come down – so it is important to have a clear strategy that locks in your profits.  

Stefanutti  (2026-05-11)

Stefanutti is a highly diversified construction company operating in Southern Africa. Its operations include roads and earthworks, marine construction, concrete structures, bulk pipelines, piling, geotechnical services, open pit contract mining, affordable housing, mine residue disposal, renewable…

Stefanutti is a highly diversified construction company operating in Southern Africa. Its operations include roads and earthworks, marine construction, concrete structures, bulk pipelines, piling, geotechnical services, open pit contract mining, affordable housing, mine residue disposal, renewable energy and other services.

It’s status as a level one BBBEE operator enables it to successfully tender for numerous government and state-owned enterprise (SOE) contracts inside South Africa. The company has benefited directly from the advent of the government of national unity (GNU) and the increase in infrastructure spend.

Historically, like the entire construction industry in South Africa, Stefanutti initially suffered from the suppression of the industry by the ANC and the adjustment to BEE requirements. Its share price fell from a peak of 2700c on the 14th of November 2007 to a low of 8c on the 13th of December 2019.

From that low point began a slow, but steady, recovery. We became interested in the share in June 2024 when its potential became more obvious. It had been in an extended sideways and downward market for 18 months before breaking up at the end of June 2024. Seeing its potential, we added it to the Winning Shares List (WSL) on the 22nd of June 2024 at a price of 146c. Consider the chart: 

STEFSTOCK (SSK) : May 2024 - 8th of March 2026. Chart by ShareFriend Pro.

The chart shows the end of the share’s sideways pattern in May and June of 2024 and then the sharp upward trend that followed. This upward trend came to an abrupt halt in September 2024 – but by then the share had already risen to a cycle high of 494c on the 30th of September 2024.

What followed was an 8-month downward channel in which the share price fell back to a cycle low of 300c on the 17th of April 2025. During this period, we maintained our view that the share had considerable upside potential and so kept it on the WSL.

Now a new upward trend has emerged, and the share has appreciated strongly to its close last Friday at a new record high of 654c.

In many senses, Stefanutti is an investment in the new South Africa and the potential of GNU to bring about significant economic reforms. Its wide diversity and BEE status means that it can benefit from projects in almost any industry, while being a preferred bidder for government contracts. This has enabled it to increase its order book and become more profitable.

In its financials for the six months to the 31st of August 2025 the company reported revenue unchanged, but headline earnings per share (HEPS) up 161%.

Since we added it to the WSL the share has appreciated by 338,36% - which amounts to over 180% per annum. Very few companies have achieved this level of growth. We expect the share to continue performing well going forward, especially given that the November 2026 elections are likely to result in further economic reform and a focus on infrastructure development.  

JSE Top 40

107,510.00 (-0.42%)

All Share

115,427.00 (-0.34%)

Financial 15

25,856.00 (-0.10%)

J200
J203
J212
Top Gainers
# Code Name Close (c) % move
1 LAB LABAT 3 +50.00%
2 BRT BRIMSTON 600 +19.05%
3 TKG TELKOM 6661 +12.02%
Top Losers
# Code Name Close (c) % move
1 RNI REINET 51136 -11.14%
2 OAS OASIS 2871 -7.36%
3 EMN E-MEDIA-N 208 -7.14%

Top Movers – Charts

Top Gainer: LAB
Top Loser: RNI