Daily Investment Update

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Market Commentary

US equity markets closed lower on Tuesday but recovered from steeper intraday losses after President Donald Trump pledged to escort oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, helping to calm initial fears over escalating US–Iran tensions. Major indices, which had fallen more than 2.50% at their worst, rebounded as the naval escort commitment tempered Brent crude’s surge and eased pressure on rising Treasury yields that had weighed on rate-sensitive technology stocks. Materials and industrials remained under strain amid energy cost concerns, while Nvidia declined 1.30% and Tesla fell 2.70%. In economic data, US consumer sentiment deteriorated in March 2026, with overall optimism missing expectations. Both the six-month economic outlook and households’ views on their personal finances weakened, while confidence in federal economic policy also edged lower, pointing to a more cautious consumer backdrop.

European equities extended their selloff on Tuesday, pressured by mounting concerns that the conflict in Iran could trigger a sustained energy supply shock and undermine regional growth. Benchmark indices fell more than 3%, as continued strikes on Gulf energy infrastructure and threats to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz pushed European natural gas prices to more than double since last Friday. Financials led the decline, with banks sliding on expectations that renewed inflationary pressures could force central banks to maintain a tighter policy stance, prompting a selloff in sovereign bonds. Santander dropped 6.20%, while BBVA and UniCredit lost around 5%. Energy-intensive industrial and chemical names also came under heavy pressure, with Siemens, Schneider and Bayer each falling more than 5%. The move was compounded by firmer-than-expected February inflation data, which reinforced a more hawkish rate outlook.

Asian markets traded in mixed fashion, with Japan extending gains while Chinese equities remained under pressure amid persistent growth and policy concerns. In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 advanced, supported by exporter and semiconductor-related counters as a softer yen improved the earnings outlook for globally exposed companies. Autos and machinery stocks led the move, benefiting from currency tailwinds and resilient external demand signals. The move also reflected relative insulation from direct energy supply disruptions, with investors rotating back into cyclicals after recent volatility.

In contrast, sentiment across mainland China was more fragile. The Shanghai Composite and CSI 300 drifted lower, weighed down by property developers and financials as concerns persisted around liquidity conditions, weak housing activity and patchy consumer demand. Stimulus expectations remain in place, but the market is increasingly focused on the scale and transmission effectiveness of any additional policy support. Hong Kong equities also struggled to gain momentum, with the Hang Seng Index pressured by technology and property names. Broader risk appetite in the region remained tentative, as investors balanced global yield movements, commodity price volatility and geopolitical risks against domestic policy developments.

South African markets took a sharp hit on Tuesday, with the FTSE/JSE All Share Index sliding over 5% to close at 119 962.82 points amid heightened global risk aversion from escalating Middle East tensions and Strait of Hormuz concerns. Resource stocks bore the heaviest losses, as miners like Impala Platinum, Northam, and Sibanye Stillwater tumbled alongside softening commodities. The rand softened against major global currencies, reaching R16.57/USD, R22.09/GBP, and R19.22/EUR, as offshore investors sought safety.

Geopolitical flare-ups in key oil chokepoints drove commodities higher, with safe-haven flows lifting gold to around $5 378 per ounce—a gain of over 1%—amid dollar softness and steady central bank accumulation. Brent crude spiked to $82.47 per barrel on supply threat fears, up roughly 5.50%, as WTI hovered near $75; platinum rose to $2 153 per ounce and silver to $90, supporting the broader metals rally. For South African producers, these gains provided a counterbalance to equity pressures, with forecasts pointing to prolonged upside in the commodity supercycle.

Navigation

ALBI (R) 1336.82 0.02 Brent Oil ($) 111.48 1.56 Gold ($) 4646.49 -0.08 Platinum ($) 1964.85 -0.81 Rand/EUR 19.50 0.03 Rand/GBP 22.36 0.05 Rand/USD 16.91 0.09

Market indicators

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Date Index Current Level 1 Day Move 1 Month Move 6 Month Move 1 Year Move
2026-04-07 ALSI 116122.75 -0.41 -7.79 9.12 34.82
2026-04-07 Basic minerals 94434.00 -0.40 -12.24 24.49 94.23
2026-04-07 Fin + Ind 30 13166.58 -0.43 -5.41 1.97 16.03
2026-04-07 Financial 61022.58 -0.16 -6.78 19.61 32.57
2026-04-07 Industrial index 135162.21 -0.70 -3.61 -10.04 3.88

Some data may be delayed, the above table reflects the latest information available from Morningstar.

Please note performance reported during the first week of each month may be impacted by distributions. Distributions are fully accounted for by the second week of each month.

Morningstar CategoryFund nameDate as ofNAV (Rands)Performance - As at 2026/03/31
1 year %3 year %5 year %Inception %
South African - Multi Asset - Low Equity PSG Investment Management Cautious Fund of Funds  Class D2025/12/31 1.62 18.78 13.52 13.67 12.14
PSG Stable Fund Class A2025/12/31 2.02 19.32 13.19 13.21 9.28
PSG Stable Fund Class E2025/12/31 2.02 20.01 13.84 13.86 9.29
PSG Wealth Preserver Fund of Funds Class D2025/12/31 29.42 16.21 13.28 11.46 9.66
South African - Multi Asset - High Equity PSG Balanced Fund Class A2025/12/31 124.60 22.94 16.10 18.29 13.20
PSG Balanced Fund Class E2025/12/31 124.90 23.65 16.77 18.96 11.17
PSG Investment Management Growth Fund of Funds  Class D2025/12/31 2.16 27.62 17.59 18.59 15.65
PSG Wealth Moderate Fund of Funds Class D2025/12/31 53.00 21.30 15.74 14.04 11.45
South African - Multi Asset - Income PSG Diversified Income Fund Class A2025/12/31 1.43 12.88 11.14 9.83 8.30
PSG Diversified Income Fund Class E2025/12/31 1.42 13.60 11.85 10.48 9.05
PSG Investment Management Multi-Asset Income Fund  of Funds Class D2025/12/31 1.21 11.21 10.01 8.96 8.75
PSG Wealth Income Fund of Funds Class D2025/12/31 13.12 10.88 10.32 8.79 8.21
South African - Equity - General PSG Equity Fund Class A2025/12/31 23.74 35.26 19.63 21.96 13.54
PSG Equity Fund Class E2025/12/31 23.87 36.42 19.39 21.81 11.05
PSG Equity Fund Class F2025/12/31 23.85 35.87 20.18 22.51 11.91
PSG Investment Management Opportunity Equity Fund of Funds Class D2025/12/31 1.64 41.37 25.31
PSG Wealth Creator Fund of Funds Class D2025/12/31 75.75 29.60 17.64 17.24 13.19
South African - Equity - SA General PSG SA Equity Class F2025/12/31 2.47 38.52 22.14 25.05 10.63
South African - Interest Bearing - SA Money Market PSG Money Market Fund Class A2025/12/31 1.00 7.23 7.82 6.43 7.93
PSG Money Market Fund Class F2025/12/31 1.00 7.53 8.13 6.72 5.65
South African - Interest Bearing - Short Term PSG Income Fund Class A2025/12/31 1.13 11.15 9.61 7.96 7.55
PSG Income Fund Class E2025/12/31 1.12 10.62 9.64 8.11 8.17
PSG Wealth Enhanced Interest Fund of Funds Class D2025/12/31 1.02 8.07 8.63 7.15 6.94
South African - Interest Bearing - Variable Term PSG Bond Fund Class A2025/12/31 1.16 25.54 23.18
South African - Multi Asset - Flexible PSG Flexible Fund Class A2025/12/31 10.70 28.42 16.60 19.61 11.83
PSG Flexible Fund Class E2025/12/31 10.71 28.75 16.90 19.91 11.57

Performance data on local funds is shown up to the last market close minus 1 day.
Some data may be delayed, the above table reflects the latest information available from Morningstar.
Please note performance reported during the first week of each month may be impacted by distributions. Distributions are fully accounted for by the second week of each month.

Global funds

Through our tried-and tested investment philosophy, we have built competitive global solutions to help clients achieve their investment goals.

The following funds are rand-denominated, but invest internationally:

Morningstar CategoryFund nameDate as ofNAV (Rands)Performance - As at 2026/03/31
1 year %3 year %5 year %Inception %
Global - Equity - General PSG Global Equity Feeder Fund Class A2025/12/31 5.77 27.62 13.33 17.13 12.53
PSG Global Equity Feeder Fund Class E2025/12/31 6.02 28.36 13.99 17.73 12.29
PSG Wealth Global Creator Feeder Fund Class D2025/12/31 5.16 3.60 16.54 10.79 13.99
Global - Multi Asset - Flexible PSG Global Flexible Feeder Fund Class A2025/12/31 4.29 22.14 11.43 14.37 12.00
PSG Global Flexible Feeder Fund Class B2025/12/31 4.55 22.84 12.07 14.95 12.52
PSG Wealth Global Flexible Feeder Fund Class D2025/12/31 5.12 -1.05 9.32 6.12 10.05
PSG Wealth Global Moderate Feeder Fund Class D2025/12/31 5.32 1.24 10.09 7.52 11.48
Global - Multi Asset - Low Equity PSG Wealth Global Preserver Feeder Fund Class D2025/12/31 1.57 -3.34 6.62 5.64 5.72

Performance data on offshore funds is shown up to the last market close minus 2 days.
Some data may be delayed, the above table reflects the latest information available from Morningstar.
Please note performance reported during the first week of each month may be impacted by distributions. Distributions are fully accounted for by the second week of each month.

Invest in other currencies

The following funds invest internationally using foreign currency

Morningstar CategoryFund nameDate as ofNAV (Rands)Performance - As at 2026/03/31
1 year %3 year %5 year %Inception %
EAA Fund GBP Cautious Allocation PSG Wealth Global Preserver FoF (GBP) Class D2025/12/31 2.21 2.29 4.07 2.81 4.86
EAA Fund GBP Flexible Allocation PSG Wealth Global Flexible FoF (GBP) Class D2025/12/31 4.27 5.99 6.73 4.12 9.04
EAA Fund Global Flex-Cap Equity PSG Global Equity Sub-Fund Class A2025/12/31 3.01 44.38 14.82 14.62 7.16
PSG Global Equity Sub-Fund Class B2025/12/31 3.13 45.11 15.44 15.25 9.64
EAA Fund Global Large-Cap Blend Equity PSG Wealth Global Creator Fund of Funds Class D2025/12/31 3.62 17.49 17.05 7.91 10.08
EAA Fund USD Cautious Allocation PSG Wealth Global Preserver FoF (USD) Class D2025/12/31 1.92 9.96 7.58 3.07 3.96
EAA Fund USD Flexible Allocation PSG Global Flexible Sub-Fund Class A2025/12/31 24.95 38.20 12.90 12.12 7.09
PSG Global Flexible Sub-Fund Class B2025/12/31 26.65 38.83 13.41 12.61 7.73
PSG Investment Management Global Flexible Fund of Funds (Dollar)2025/12/31 1.88 14.07 8.77 2.25 3.23
PSG Wealth Global Flexible FoF (USD) Class D2025/12/31 3.67 12.38 9.93 3.48 8.04
EAA Fund USD Moderate Allocation PSG Wealth Global Moderate Fund of Funds Class D2025/12/31 2.45 14.62 10.88 4.75 5.87

Performance data on offshore funds is shown up to the last market close minus 2 days.
Some data may be delayed, the above table reflects the latest information available from Morningstar.
Please note performance reported during the first week of each month may be impacted by distributions. Distributions are fully accounted for by the second week of each month.

House view equity portfolios

Fund display name Performance –As at 2026/02/19
1 year %3 year %5 year %Inception %
PSG Wealth Income Growth Equity Portfolio 34.75 16.44 13.76 6.22
PSG Wealth Offshore Equity Portfolio (USD) 17.19 12.11 8.96 12.05
PSG Wealth SA Equity Portfolio 41.57 15.53 12.72 7.72
PSG Wealth SA Property Equity Portfolio 43.20 26.73 20.73 3.34

* PSG Wealth equity portfolio performance are shown gross of management fees, but net of brokerage and other trading costs.
The House view portfolios are bespoke solution portfolios and not part of the Collective Investment Schemes’ portfolios.

Recent investment ideas

Anglo American Plc

Analyst thesis

Our recommendation is based on:

  • Copper-leveraged portfolio into electrification: Anglo American’s increasing focus on copper and premium iron ore, supported by the proposed merger with Teck Resources, positions it as a key beneficiary of structurally higher copper demand driven by grid investment, renewables, electric vehicles (EVs), and data centres.​

  • Structural copper deficit supports pricing: Industry analysis suggests global copper demand could grow by 40%–60% over the next two decades, with a sizeable supply gap set to emerge due to permitting delays, grade decline, and underinvestment constraining new projects. This dynamic underpins a supportive long-term price deck for tier-one producers such as Anglo.​

  • Portfolio simplification driving quality: Excluding De Beers and other non-core assets, representing lower quality and lower margin businesses, Anglo’s core copper and premium iron ore businesses delivered strong margins in FY25, reinforcing a higher-return, lower-volatility earnings base.

  • De Beers is a clear drag: De Beers’ loss-making performance and impairment in FY25 weighed on group returns. Management’s plan to separate or divest the underperforming diamonds business serves as a visible value-unlock catalyst, enabling investors to re‑rate Anglo based on its core copper and iron ore franchise.

Amazon.com, Inc

Analyst thesis

Our recommendation is based on:

  • The company is structurally shifting from lower margin ecommerce towards high margin, cash-generating web services through AWS, which accounts for 18% of net sales and 57% of operating profit. AWS’s revenue contribution has increased from 13% to 18% over the past five years.

  • AMZN continues to generate strong cash flow in an environment with a drag on cash due to high capex needs. Operating cash flows rose 20% over this period and we anticipate similar growth in FY26 driven by robust AWS performance.

  • Demand for artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure platforms serve as a catalyst for long-term growth in cloud and AI services.

    Various competitive advantages across business segments, including scale, cost leadership and network effects in cloud and logistics, alongside differentiation through quick delivery and exclusive access to resources such as distribution networks and vast customer data.

  • Key growth drivers going forward include:

    o Continued global cloud adoption accelerated by AI.

    o Margin expansion through higher AWS and advertising growth combined with fulfilment network efficiencies and automation.

    o Ongoing logistics expansion.

    o Long-term growth projects, including an $8 billion stake in Anthropic, Kuiper, Zoox and freight services.

  • Attractive valuation levels from a P:E perspective compared to its own history.

Berkshire Hathaway Inc

Analyst thesis

Our recommendation is based on:

  • Diversified conglomerate with permanent capital advantage: Berkshire’s insurance operations generate a substantial float, providing a large, low-cost funding base that supports acquisitions and long-term investments. Its wholly owned subsidiaries span insurance, railroads, energy, manufacturing, and retail, contributing to diversified earnings and cash flows across economic cycles.

  • Record cash reserves support strategic optionality: Berkshire held a record cash and US Treasury Bills at 4Q25, reflecting disciplined capital allocation and a fortress balance sheet. This substantial liquidity, combined with strong operating cash flow, provides capacity for large‑scale acquisitions and opportunistic deployment.

  • Leadership transition introduces near term valuation risk: Warren Buffett’s exit creates the risk of removing a long-standing ‘Buffett premium’ from Berkshire’s valuation, reflecting his exceptional capital allocation track record. Any missteps by successor Greg Abel could lead to the shares trading at or below fair value rather than at a premium, as investors reassess management quality and execution risk.

  • Valuation supported by quality and balance sheet strength: While Berkshire trades at a premium to its long-term average book value multiple, its diversified earnings base, conservative leverage and strong balance sheet provide support for steady intrinsic value growth. Relative to its quality, track record and financial resilience, we see scope for continued long-term outperformance versus the broader market.

Corporate Actions

Date Company Share code Expectation
08 April 2026 AFRICAN RAINBOWARI

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 AVI LIMITEDAVI

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 GRINDROD LIMITEDGND

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 GRINDROD LIMITEDGND

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 GRINDROD PREF SHGNDP

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 HYPROP INVESTMENTHYP

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 LIBSTAR HOLDINGS LIMITEDLBR

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 MPACT LIMITEDMPT

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 MOMENTUM METROPOLITAN HOLDINGS LTDMTM

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 MTN GROUP LIMITEDMTN

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 NEDBANKNED

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 OLD MUTUAL LIMITEDOMU

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 PUTPROP LIMITEDPPR

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 RESILIENT PROPERTY INCOME FUND LTDRES

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 STANDARD BANK 6.5 PERCENT PREF SHRSSBKP

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 SABVEST CAPITAL LIMITEDSBP

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 STANDARD BANK 2ND PREF SHARESSBPP

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 SCHRODER REAL ESTATE INV TRUST PLCSCD

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 SEA HARVEST HOLDINGS PTY LTDSHG

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 SANLAM LIMITEDSLM

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 SUN INTERNATIONALSUI

Cash Dividend

08 April 2026 SUN INTERNATIONALSUI

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 BRIMSTN-N-BRN

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 BRIMSTONBRT

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 GROWTHPOINT PROP LTDGRT

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 JSE LIMITEDJSE

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 JSE LIMITEDJSE

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 OUTSURANCE GROUP LIMITEDOUT

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 OUTSURANCE GROUP LIMITEDOUT

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 QUILTER PLCQLT

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 RAINBOW CHICKEN LIMITEDRBO

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 SA CORPORATE REAL ESTATE LTDSAC

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 STANDARD BANK GRPSBK

Cash Dividend

15 April 2026 WEAVERWVR

Cash Dividend

The information above is to the best of our knowledge correct.
The Corporate Actions are updated weekly.

Fund performance

Collective Investment Schemes in Securities (CIS) are generally medium-term to long-term investments. The value of participatory interests (units) may go down as well as up and past performance is not a guide to future performance. Collective Investment Schemes are traded at ruling prices and can engage in borrowing and scrip lending. A schedule of fees and charges and maximum commissions is available on request from PSG Collective Investments (RF) Limited. Commission and incentives may be paid, and if so, are included in the overall costs. Forward pricing is used. The Portfolios may be capped at any time in order for them to be managed in accordance with their mandate.

Performance is calculated for the portfolio and individual investor performance may differ as a result thereof. Different classes of participatory interest can apply to these portfolios and are subject to different fees, charges and possibly dividend withholding tax and will thus have differing performances. Annualised performances show longer term performance rescaled over a 12-month period. Individual performance may differ as a result of initial fees, the actual investment date, the date of reinvestment and dividend withholding tax. The portfolio is valued at 15h00 daily. Income distributions are net of any applicable taxes. Investment performance data is for illustrative purposes only. Actual performance figures are available on request. Always refer to the fund fact sheet (Minimum Disclosure Document) for full details, fees and risks of the fund.

PSG Financial Services +27 (21) 918 7800

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