Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 11 December 2025
📘 Source: Business Day

For most of the past decade the JSE has been defined by delistings, a thin new listings pipeline and a sense that the real growth stories were finding capital elsewhere. Private equity, trade buyers and offshore exchanges absorbed many of the country’s most interesting assets. Local investors learnt to live with a shrinking universe of listed opportunities.

As 2025 draws to a close, that position is being tested. No-one is talking about a boom, but a mix of global, local and exchange-specific developments suggests that South Africa’s capital markets may at least have moved off the bottom. The global backdrop is the first part of the story.

Emerging markets have spent the past two years in the shadow of US exceptionalism, with a strong dollar and high real yields pulling capital towards developed markets. Now the rate cycle looks closer to a plateau than a fresh ascent. Inflation in many large emerging economies has eased from post-pandemic highs and several central banks are signalling that eventual easing is on the table.

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When US rates peak and the dollar loses momentum, risk appetite for emerging market assets has historically improved. South Africa enters this phase with familiar baggage but also a powerful valuation argument. Growth has been weak, logistics and energy constraints persist, and policy noise has not disappeared.

At the same time, years of foreign selling have left local equities deeply underowned and cheaply priced. Years of foreign selling have left local equities deeply underowned and cheaply priced. A recent report noted that foreign investors have been net sellers of South African equities throughout 2025, leaving the market one of the most underowned positions in emerging market funds.

The obvious implication is that cheap South African stocks are expected to attract foreign buyers in 2026. There are complementary signals in the currency market. Recent analysis suggests that a gauge of expected volatility for the rand against the dollar is at its lowest level since the start of this century.

Investors will not suddenly forget that the rand is cyclical, but a calmer currency removes one major objection when global asset allocators weigh up South African exposure or support local listings. The second part of the story lies in how the exchange presents itself and how companies respond. On the JSE side, there has been a clear attempt to re-engage international capital.

The JSE’s recent capital markets day in London brought together portfolio managers, asset owners and JSE executives for discussions on inward listings, the role of South Africa in global portfolios and the state of investor sentiment. Outreach of this kind does not guarantee flows, but it signals that the bourse believes the case for South African assets is strong enough to take back on the road. Low valuations, early hints of returning foreign interest, a calmer rand and a more outward-looking JSE have created the most constructive backdrop for listings in years.

On the issuer side, there are also signs of life.WeBuyCars and Boxerlisted in 2024 and 2025 has already delivered more initial public offerings (IPOs) than the JSE has seen in several years, including the listings of Optasia and Cell C and the debut of smaller growth names. Data cited by Bloomberg suggests that the exchange is on track for its best year for IPO fundraising since 2017.

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Originally published by Business Day • December 11, 2025

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