Episode Description
π World Wide Markets β Episode 667
π 25 February 2026 | Hosted by Simon Brown
Powered by Standard Bank Global Markets, Retail & Shyft
β‘ Eskom: 280 Days Without Load Shedding
- South Africa has now reached 280 days without load shedding. Standard Bank's electricity tracker report highlights that the last significant outages were 26 hours across April and May 2025, taking the effective streak back to 26 March 2024. After 17 years of load shedding since 2008, the energy availability factor and other key metrics are looking dramatically better. Credit goes to Eskom's operational improvements, industrial-scale solar and wind investment, and households with rooftop solar installations.
πΊπΈ Trump's Tariff Chaos: Supreme Court Ruling & What Comes Next
The ruling: The US Supreme Court ruled 6-3 against Trump's use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) of 1977 to impose tariffs, finding no international emergency existed. This is a significant legal defeat.
The refund problem: Roughly $150β170 billion in tariffs have been collected. Companies like Walmart and Costco will want that money back, since the Supreme Court has effectively declared these tariffs illegal. Chief Justice Roberts acknowledged the refund process will be "messy" β an understatement.
Trump's new move: On Friday evening, Trump pivoted to Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, signing an executive order imposing a flat 10% tariff on all countries (with the law allowing up to 15%). This is a notable reduction for South Africa, which was previously on 30%. However, this only runs for 150 days, expiring mid-July.
Other legal avenues Trump could pursue:
Section 301 (Trade Act of 1974): Used against China in his first term, but requires formal investigations and findings β too slow for Trump's style.
Section 338 (Tariff Act of 1930): Allows up to 50% tariffs without investigation, has never been used, and would almost certainly face court challenges.
The bottom line: Tariffs aren't going away. Trump views them as a political weapon and a negotiating stick. He'll keep finding new legislative tools to wield them. Around a dozen trade deals have been signed under the "90 deals in 90 days" framework, though countries that signed early (like the UK at ~10%) may feel they overpaid.
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π» SaaS Stocks Under Pressure: Is Vibe Coding Really the Threat?
Software-as-a-service stocks have been hammered on fears that "vibe coding" (using AI tools to build software) could replace platforms like Salesforce. Simon is sceptical β replacing the software is perhaps 10% of the challenge. The real difficulty is retraining tens of thousands of staff, migrating data without losses, and managing a massive transition process.
Goldman Sachs' SOHO Index shows capital-heavy stocks (manufacturers, farmers) up nearly 40% since June 2025, while capital-light stocks (Microsoft, NVIDIA, Alphabet) have been largely flat β a notable divergence.
IBM dropped ~10% on news that Anthropic's Claude Code can convert COBOL to modern languages, but Simon remains cautious about overhyping AI capabilities. He's currently reviewing a 20-page AI-generated SaaS research report from Claude Opus 4.6 and will report back next week.
π° Budget 2026 Preview
What to expect:
Fiscal drag relief is likely, funded by extra revenue from precious metals booms (higher corporate tax and dividend tax from gold and PGM miners) and SARS's clampdown on arrears (~R20 billion recovered).
Tax-free savings annual limit could increase from R36,000 β possibly to R40,000 or even R60,000 (per Nireena Fissa of ETFSA, since 60,000 divides neatly by 12). This costs Treasury very little in the short term since the big capital gains tax hit is years away.
Reg 28 changes: Unlikely β these would cost Treasury money immediately.
Capital gains exclusion (R40,000): Unlikely to change despite being unchanged for over a decade β another stealth tax.
Interest exemptions: No changes expected.
Simon's tax tip: He's been selling down long-held ETF positions (originally ITRIX, now Cygnia World) to use the R40,000 annual CGT exclusion, then reinvesting into a different ETF with a better total expense ratio. Important: don't sell and rebuy the same instrument immediately β SARS treats that as "washing."
Overall expectation: A boring budget, which is exactly what markets want.
π Commodities Check-In
Palladium π© Broke through $1,100 and $1,200 early last year, pulled back to $1,350 late in 2025, now consolidating around $1,617β$1,700. Support sits at the $1,650β$1,700 level. Not going to the moon, but holding at higher levels β which is what matters.
Platinum πͺ Broke $1,000 in June, then $1,250 in July. Has since consolidated around the $2,000β$2,150 range, well off the $2,800 high but maintaining higher support levels. Results from Sibanye-Stillwater, Impala Platinum, and Northam confirm the improved earnings picture.
Gold Currently at $5,153 and running hard. Simon admits gold has proved him wrong β after January's volatile drop of nearly $1,000 from the $5,600 high to the Monday low, he expected consolidation around $4,500 or even $4,000. Instead, gold consolidated around $5,000 and has resumed its rally. His advice for those who feel they've "missed" the run: scale in gradually, buying a third at current prices and adding on dips or at intervals.
Brent Crude Oil Had been under pressure until the US detained the president of Venezuela (heavy, sour crude β less critical but still impactful). Oil briefly dipped below $60 but has since recovered. The $70β$71.50 level is important resistance; a break above targets $80 and then mid-$80s. Looks like a short-term blip for now β hopefully not the start of a longer trend.
π± Rand/Dollar Update The rand is trading around R16.02 to the dollar, with the trend firmly toward a weaker dollar. Foreigners have been net buyers of South African bonds, and the US dollar index continues to show weakness β something Trump actively wants. If the dollar loses another 7β8%, that could push the rand into the mid-R14s. Sounds dramatic, but as Simon puts it: "Don't fight the rand."
ποΈ Next week:
Budget reaction + AI SaaS research report review
Thanks for listening β look after yourself, and if you can, look after somebody else too. βοΈ