
South African Stocks Tipped to End Decade of Foreign Outflows
The valuation discount of South African equities relative to developing peers is set to narrow as some of the capital flowing out of the US and into emerging markets finds its way to Johannesburg stocks, according to Momentum Investments.
Foreign investors have been net sellers of South African stocks every year since 2016, and net outflows year-to-date already amount to $6.3 billion, according to JSE Ltd. data. Even so, the benchmark FTSE/JSE Africa All Share Index is outperforming the MSCI Emerging Market stock index and the S&P 500 in dollar terms this year.
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Transition to state lottery In terms of the RFP, bidders for the fourth lottery licence were 'required to commit to positioning the state to transition from privately operated National Lottery and National Sports Pool operations to a state-owned and operated National Lottery'. Applicants were informed that they had to 'demonstrate their ability to capacitate the state to prepare for and ultimately become the operator of the National Lottery and the National Sports Pool at the expiry of the Licence Period'. They were also required to provide a plan for how they would 'support the state in developing the necessary infrastructure, skills, and capacity to operate the National Lottery and Sports Pool'. A key part of the RFP deals with the transfer of rights to technology to operate the lottery. 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The DA's Mat Cuthbert. who played a key role in Parliament in helping expose the endemic corruption that overwhelmed the NLC under its previous leadership, said, 'At the time, the NLC only had access to approximately 34% of all revenue generated by the National Lottery, housed under the NLDTF (National Lottery Distribution Trust Fund.) One can only imagine how much more public funding would have been stolen had they had access to the approximately R7 billion generated in ticket sales revenue per annum.' Professor Alex van den Heever of the Wits School of Governance was also sceptical of a state-run lottery. The wide discretion granted to the Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition to appoint the board, commissioner and distributing agencies 'has been a recipe for corruption as a single person appoints all the strategic decision makers', he said. 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