Close Menu
Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Commodities
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Fintech
    • Investments
    • Precious Metal
    • Property
    • Stock Market
    Invest Intellect
    Home»Investments»Shrinking JSE means growing problems for your investments
    Investments

    Shrinking JSE means growing problems for your investments

    July 14, 20255 Mins Read


    As the number of companies listed on the JSE continues to decline, together with the absence of major new listings, the issue of concentration continues to grow for local investors.

    This adds significant risk, especially when it comes to retirement and pension funds.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    CONTINUE READING BELOW

    Read: Fresh wave of JSE delistings looms

    Currently, the JSE has a total market capitalisation of R20.9 trillion. The top five – Prosus, BHP Group, AB InBev, British American Tobacco and Richemont – account for half of this value (R10.7 trillion).

    When you combine the top 20, that number rises to 80% (R16 trillion).

    An excellent analysis of this problem by Alyssa Viljoen, equity analyst at Merchant West Investments, shows just how big this problem is for the country’s larger asset managers.

    According to Viljoen, when it comes to daily volumes, micro- and small-cap stocks account for just 2% of daily volume (compared to the Top 40’s more than 80%).

    She argues that because these asset managers are managing tens or hundreds of billions of rands in assets, they “simply cannot build meaningful positions in illiquid stocks without moving the price against themselves”. Plus, with Sanlam effectively outsourcing its asset management function to Ninety One, this problem is arguably exacerbated.

    Read/listen:
    Digging into the best unit trusts halfway through 2025
    What is catching the eye of smart money on the JSE?
    How to build a core portfolio

    The flagship equity funds of the country’s five largest asset managers all hold Prosus/Naspers among their top 10 holdings, with four holding Standard Bank and AngloGold Ashanti, three holding Capitec, Gold Fields and Sanlam, and two holding AB InBev, Gold Fields and FirstRand.

    To illustrate this, the team ran a simple thought experiment that assumed a South African fund manager with approximately R700 billion in assets under management.

    “If that manager wanted to build a 1% position across their business in Naspers – the largest stock in the JSE All Share – while limiting themselves to 30% of daily trading volume, it would take roughly 9.5 days to build the position … It would take almost 50 days just to exit a 1% position in Shoprite’s stock, for example,” says Viljoen.

    Number of days for a manager to build or exit a 1% position across the 20 most liquid stocks on the JSE, assuming they participate in 30% of the daily volume:

    Source: Merchant West Investments

    “For a fund manager, taking that long to exit a position raises the risk,” says Viljoen.

    “Market conditions can change materially over such a long execution window. Earnings results, macroeconomic developments, or even company-specific news can move the share price before the full trade is complete …

    “For large managers, this makes it very difficult to adjust positions quickly in response to new information, which is a key part of active management. Past events such as the Steinhoff collapse highlight the potential downside.”

    Read:
    Harmonising Africa’s financial markets is crucial for foreign investment
    Why smart investors are moving beyond traditional share portfolios

    Viljoen argues that while many active managers will sell the fact that they will pick stocks based on fundamental analysis and bottom-up research, in reality “many portfolios converge on the same names”.

    ADVERTISEMENT:

    CONTINUE READING BELOW

    “This is down to the simple fact that there are precious few liquid stocks on the JSE that are investable at scale.”

    She says “the result is a form of forced indexing where active portfolios start to resemble the benchmark simply because there are not enough scalable alternatives”.

    This has obvious knock-on effects for investors, but most – especially those saving for retirement – may be completely oblivious to these.

    Because portfolios have increasingly become concentrated in a few large shares, single-stock risk has increased.

    This also means that active managers are less likely to outperform as there are fewer stocks that they can utilise to generate this performance.

    While managers can diversify with offshore markets, when it comes to retirement funds (under Regulation 28), there are strict limits on the amount of offshore exposure a fund can have.

    Viljoen says Merchant West believes “this situation is causing inefficient valuations across a broad range of stocks” on the JSE.

    Of course, smaller boutique asset managers (which Merchant West is) are and have been seizing this opportunity. This is obvious as they have a smaller amount of capital to deploy and can therefore take “meaningful positions in under-researched, small- and mid-cap stocks” – and in companies that are too illiquid for larger investment houses.

    One can see this when studying the fund fact sheets of smaller managers. Even those with equity funds sub-R10 billion show some interesting names in their top 10 holdings such as Premier Group, WBHO and Tiger Brands in a R4 billion fund, Super Group and WeBuyCars in one R6 billion fund, and Northam Platinum and AECI in another R11 billion one.

    Listen/read: SA’s small and mid caps have been flying

    What Viljoen doesn’t say is that while smaller managers are able to patiently build positions in these less liquid small and mid-cap stocks over time, exiting these can be as difficult and slow as entering them. You could conceivably have the situation where the only buyer of a 10% stake in one of these small- and mid-caps is another fund manager – retail investors would never be able to snap up the supply of shares on offer.

    This means these smaller managers are, in some ways, relying on future bids from another manager or some sort of other liquidity event such as a bid from a listed rival or a private offer (meaning a delisting).

    A Steinhoff-type event would be as catastrophic for holders of these shares as it was for holders of that retailer (albeit at a smaller absolute scale).

    Follow Moneyweb’s in-depth finance and business news on WhatsApp here.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Redefining realistic financial freedom in retirement

    Investments

    Israel climbs to top 8 in Europe for investments in the UK

    Investments

    Using your IRA to travel in retirement: Smart or risky?

    Investments

    Kazakh Investments in Kyrgyz Republic Triple

    Investments

    Bonds aren’t as ‘safe’ as they once were. It’s time to rethink fixed-income strategies.

    Investments

    PSEG Reports 33% Earnings Jump and Boosts Investments

    Investments
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Picks
    Cryptocurrency

    Kamala Harris’ Participation In Upcoming Major Crypto Conference Sought By Democratic Donors

    Cryptocurrency

    Crypto bros slam US govt’s cryptocurrency policy | Information Age

    Precious Metal

    Barrick Quarterly Earnings Buoyed by Higher Prices

    Editors Picks

    Growing Tech Firm Clio Ranked Among World’s Top Cloud Companies

    August 6, 2024

    UK fintech firm Revolut valued at $45B after secondary share sale

    August 17, 2024

    Trump-Putin call yields little progress

    May 20, 2025

    Redevco conclut un financement de 56.8 M€ pour sa nouvelle plateforme Real Estate Debt

    April 1, 2025
    What's Hot

    Factors That Will Influence the Price of Bitcoin in 2024

    July 24, 2024

    The 10 U.S. states with America’s best housing markets

    July 16, 2024

    IT worker reveals life hack to owning multiple homes

    October 20, 2024
    Our Picks

    Ljubljana Tops the 2025 Crypto-Friendly Cities Index

    April 25, 2025

    Venmo Users Can Now Purchase Bitcoin Through MoonPay Integration

    October 18, 2024

    Navigating offshore investments: Understanding your direct and indirect options

    May 6, 2025
    Weekly Top

    Gold Steadies as Markets Weigh Geopolitics, Tariffs, Rates Path

    August 6, 2025

    Lake District: Thousands flocked to Cartmel Agricultural Show 2025

    August 6, 2025

    Redefining realistic financial freedom in retirement

    August 6, 2025
    Editor's Pick

    The investments you can hold in a stocks and shares Isa – and those you can’t

    March 27, 2025

    Copper Peptides In Skincare – What The Experts Think

    August 8, 2024

    grid integration and its importance for digital payments

    July 30, 2025
    © 2025 Invest Intellect
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.