The Mutapa Investment Fund has restructured Kuvimba Mining House (KMH), unbundling the group into five specialised commodity-focused entities in a strategic shift to sharpen operational focus, improve governance and unlock value across Zimbabwe’s mineral resources. The standalone entities are Mutapa Gold Resources, Mutapa Base Metals, Mutapa Energy Minerals, Mutapa Platinum Group and Mutapa Frontier, which will focus on rare earths and frontier minerals.Mutapa chief investment officer Mr Simba Chinyemba, announcing the restructuring at a media briefing yesterday, said the move marked a fundamental reorganisation of Mutapa’s minerals cluster, transitioning from a broad holding structure to specialised entities aligned to specific commodities. “The significant thing is the strategic shift for the Mutapa Investment Fund, specifically regarding our mineral resources cluster, as we unveil a comprehensive restructuring that transitions us from a broad holding model to specialised commodity-specific verticals,” he said.
Under the new structure, the mining assets previously held through KMH have been reorganised into five distinct units. Mr Chinyemba said Mutapa Gold Resources will be headed by Mr Trevor Bernard, Mutapa Base Metals by Mr Godwin Gambiza, Mutapa Energy Minerals by Mr Innocent Rukweza, and Mutapa Platinum Group by Mr Munashe Shava. Mutapa’s mining interests were previously held through a spiderweb of entities, including Kuvimba Mining House, the former Industrial Development Corporation (IDC) and several minority holding entities.
Zimbabwe’s sovereign wealth fund’s overall portfolio, which includes mining, is part of a US$16 billion total asset base, aiming to drive economic growth. “We are rationalising this structure to create a more streamlined and efficient ownership model. What we are doing is neither unique nor experimental.
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It simply reflects how the world’s leading mining houses organise themselves to be effective, accountable and aligned with long-term shareholder outcomes,” he said. Mr Chinyemba noted that the restructuring followed a rigorous diagnostic assessment of governance, financial performance and operational efficiency across the minerals cluster, with global data pointing to the disadvantages of diversified conglomerates. He said the technical and economic drivers of different commodities vary widely, making specialised oversight critical to performance.
“The technical and economic drivers of gold mining differ vastly from those of lithium, or coal, or many other minerals. This new structure allows us to calibrate capital allocation and technical oversight to the specific cycles of each commodity,” said Mr Chinyemba. He added that the reorganisation would flatten management hierarchies, speed up decision-making and allow the group to respond more effectively to volatile global commodity markets.
“This is the direction the industry is pursuing to sharpen focus and improve returns,” Mr Chinyemba said, citing global mining majors such as Rio Tinto and BHP, which have reorganised around core commodity units to unlock value and scale exposures. Mr Chinyemba said the restructuring is underpinned by Mutapa’s 2026 FIRE strategy, which is an acronym for Fix, Invigorate, Revive, Strengthen and Extract value from its portfolio companies. “This restructuring is the foundation of our 2026 FIRE strategy, which allows us to identify crown jewel assets for scaling while isolating risks. While this process is subject to applicable regulatory approvals, our goal remains the preservation and growth of the national wealth,” he said.
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