
Appropriation Bill passes despite intense debate and deep political divisions
Parliament has passed the 2025 Appropriation Bill, approving over R1.2 trillion in government spending after weeks of tense GNU negotiations.
The Bill passed with 262 votes in favour and 90 against, with support from the ANC, DA, IFP, ActionSA and others; the EFF and MK Party opposed it.
Deputy Finance Minister David Masondo warned that failure to pass the budget would cripple public services and halt government operations by October.
Parliament has officially passed the 2025/26 Appropriation Bill, authorising government to spend just over R1.2 trillion over the current financial year.
The vote, which took place at the Cape Town International Convention Centre on Wednesday, came after weeks of tense negotiations within the government of national unity (GNU) and fierce opposition from key parties.
The vote succeeded with 262 MPs in favour, 90 against, and no abstentions — exceeding the required simple majority in the 400-seat National Assembly.
The sitting formed the final chapter of the budget cycle and included the tabling of the Standing Committee on Appropriations' report, a debate on departmental allocations, and the Bill's second reading. Voting was conducted manually, with party whips announcing how their members voted. Although MPs were permitted to declare a different vote from their party line, none chose to do so.
Among those who supported the Bill were the ANC holding 159 seats, the DA Alliance with 87 seats, IFP (12), Patriotic Alliance (9), Freedom Front Plus (5), ActionSA (5), ACDP (2), UDM (2), Rise Mzansi (2), BOSA (2), Al Jama-ah (1), PAC (1), and GOOD Party (1).
Opposing the Bill were the uMkhonto weSizwe Party (MKP) with 51 seats, the EFF with 36, ATM (1), National Coloured Congress (1), and United Africans Transformation (1).
This passage marks a critical moment in a process that began with the tabling of the main budget speech- three times due to coalition disagreements within the GNU, followed by debates on the fiscal framework and the Division of Revenue Bill.
The Appropriation Bill, which assigns spending to national departments through formal Votes, is the legislative tool that legally authorises public expenditure.
Masondo: 'Delay would gripple government'
Deputy Finance Minister David Masondo warned that failure to pass the bill would have devastating consequences.
This R1.2 trillion is not just a number. It represents school meals, hospital beds, social grants and infrastructure projects.
David Masondo
'Without passing this bill, the government will be without authority for permission to spend beyond last year's allocation. As a result, the government will not fully provide services, including public servants.'
He added that without legal authority, government could only spend 45% of last year's budget until the end of July, and 10% per month thereafter.
'By October, we would have reached 100% of last year's appropriation, and government would effectively be unable to operate,' he said.
The second implication of the delay of the Budget, Masondo said, was that 'critical priorities and new priorities can't be funded'.
Masondo detailed how the bill would fund critical programmes, including:
R6.7 billion for compensation in the health sector, enabling the hiring of 800 doctors and addressing 5 000 vacancies.
R5.1 billion for education, including teacher compensation and early childhood development.
R470 million for digitising Home Affairs operations.
R11 billion towards industrialisation via the Department of Trade, Industry and Competition.
'The most vulnerable in our society — those dependent on clinics, schools, and grants — would suffer most if we fail to act,' Masondo said.
He acknowledged South Africa's stagnant economic growth and overreliance on state-owned enterprises (SOEs), saying government must 'undertake structural reforms' to open up sectors like energy and freight logistics to competition.
READ: Ramaphosa buckles under DA's demands – fires Nkabane, saves the Budget
Maimane: 'Budget must prioritise growth, not bureaucracy'
The Standing Committee on Appropriations, chaired by Build One South Africa leader Dr Mmusi Maimane, presented the Bill to the House.
Maimane framed the bill in stark terms, warning that debt servicing now consumes 22 cents of the national budget.
'61% of our spending is now on the social wage,' he said.
And if we're not careful in how we prioritise budgeting, in the outer year of this medium term, we'll soon be spending more on social grants than on any economic growth drivers.
Mmusi Maimane
He stressed the need for economic reforms and audits of ghost workers, underutilised state assets, and duplicative government agencies.
Maimane welcomed infrastructure investments — including R1.3 trillion allocated to the transport department over the medium term — but noted that less than 1% of the budget went to innovation, small business and trade.
'We have to spend smarter,' he said.
But not all parties were convinced.
EFF: This is a budget of betrayal
The EFF outright rejected the bill, with MP Omphile Maotwe calling it a 'compromise budget negotiated in smoke-filled bedrooms' to keep a sinking coalition afloat.
'This budget will not eradicate pit toilets. It will not hire more doctors or nurses or teachers. It will not grow the economy. It will make the poor even poorer,' she said.
Maotwe accused GNU members of selling out for 'posts and blue lights,' adding: 'Principles have been sold, and economic logic sacrificed on the altar of convenience.'
The EFF argued that even within the constraints of the fiscal framework, government could have funded the employment of 9 000 doctors, eradicated pit toilets in schools, increased SARS capacity, and boosted basic education, but chose not to.
'We did not turn this budget into a political football,' said Maotwe.
'We engaged in a principled manner — and for that, we reject it.'
MK Party: Budget fails the nation
MKP's Sanele Mwali echoed the EFF's rejection, accusing the GNU of clinging to discredited neoliberal policies that had failed since 1994.
'The ANC and the so-called GNU have missed the opportunity to redefine our economic tragedy,' Mwali said.
'They continue to prescribe the same medicine that's killing the patient.'
He decried the government's 'obsession with debt reduction,' citing rising food prices, 60% youth unemployment, and 30% increases in electricity tariffs.
'The MK Party says the economy is about people, not profits,' Mwali said. 'We reject this budget.'
DA: 'Budget must break cycle of dependency'
DA MP Kingsley Wakelin said the country faced a 'dangerous crossroads,' and the budget must choose between 'dependency on the state' and 'investment in economic growth.'
The people no longer trust the ANC to govern alone.
Kingsley Wakelin
'They want jobs, not handouts.'
He criticised government for allocating R700 million to a 'costly national dialogue' project instead of practical interventions like RDP houses, youth job grants or electricity support.
'The DA demands a comprehensive job-seeker's plan, investment in ECD, and the abolition of dysfunctional SETAs,' he added.
Wakelin also accused the ruling party of distractions: 'Internal ANC conflicts, MK's constitutional undermining, and EFF's implosions have diverted focus from what really matters.'
READ: GNU hangs by a thread as DA digs in on budget and ANC heads into crucial NEC
ActionSA: Budget lacks vision and coherence
ActionSA MP Alan Beesley said South Africa was in 'a crisis of unemployment, poverty, and violent crime,' and the budget failed to meet the moment.
'Economic growth is stuck at 0.1%, and the Financial and Fiscal Commission warns of a possible recession. This bill lacks vision, coherence, and urgency,' he said.
Beesley slammed the SETAs for becoming 'cesspools of corruption' and condemned the bloated Cabinet.
'This too is corruption — the systemic abuse of public funds in full view,' he said.
'There is enough money to run this country well. But not enough to run a bloated Cabinet and feed ANC greed.'
He added: 'ActionSA will support departmental budgets that move the country forward. And we will reject those that don't — based on principle, not politics.'
Despite strong opposition, the Bill was ultimately adopted with broad support.
But this support was not automatic. The DA had earlier threatened to block the Bill unless President Cyril Ramaphosa acted against then-higher education minister Dr Nobuhle Nkabane, who the party accused of misleading Parliament over board appointments to Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETAs).
Ramaphosa responded by dismissing Nkabane earlier this week, replacing her with former Deputy Minister Buti Manamela and appointing former KwaZulu-Natal Premier Dr Nomusa Dube-Ncube as the new deputy minister.
The DA confirmed that the dismissal, combined with critical budget allocations, was sufficient to secure its backing.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News24
a few seconds ago
- News24
JMPD denies DA's R7 000 daily fine quota claims, says safety comes first
X JMPD Metro police allegedly offered overtime bonuses for hitting R7 000 daily fine targets at strategic roadblock. DA challenges legality of the JMPD operations, claiming traffic stops violate National Road Traffic Act requirements. The party calls this Johannesburg's desperate revenue grab, demands Premier Panyaza Lesufi should act. The Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department (JMPD) has denied allegations that the City of Johannesburg is turning law enforcement into a 'cash cow' to plug the municipality's budget shortfalls. According to JMPD spokesperson Xolani Fihla, its enforcement efforts are focused solely on public safety and not on revenue generation. This comes after the DA, in a statement released on Monday, raised serious concerns about the alleged fine collection quotas imposed on JMPD officers. According to the DA, 'officers have reliably informed us that they are under pressure to collect R7 000 a day each'. The party said it had been approached 'by concerned JMPD insiders who describe a system where daily fine quotas are now an unwritten rule'. However, in a statement released on the same day, the JMPD labelled these claims as misleading, insisting that public safety, not profits, is what drives its enforcement operations. Fihla acknowledged that issuing traffic fines was part of a metro officer's duty but insisted that their performance was not judged by the number of fines they issued, but rather by their impact on road safety and compliance. It is important to clarify that while issuing citations is an expected part of an officer's duty to enforce traffic regulations, there is no quota system that they are expected to follow. Xolani Fihla Fihla added: 'The integrity of our operations is paramount. All actions are taken in strict accordance with the law.' The officers are allegedly under pressure to reach their daily R7 000 target, with overtime incentives offered to those who comply, according to the DA. The result? A spike in roadside checks and surprise roadblocks, particularly at major intersections. According to the DA, these are not safety checkpoints, but strategic fine-collection points aimed at squeezing revenue out of ordinary, often economically struggling, motorists. These legally indefensible roadside checks exist solely to extract revenue from struggling motorists, many of whom are already facing economic hardship. DA The party also questioned the legality of many roadside operations, alleging that they fail to meet the basic procedural requirements under the National Road Traffic Act and the SA Police Service Standing Orders, including proper signage, adequate warning to motorists, and senior officer authorisation. 'A DA-led government would restore integrity to JMPD operations. We would end revenue-based targets and bring traffic enforcement back to its core purpose: saving lives.'
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Fortuna Advances Diamba Sud Gold Project in Senegal with Updated Mineral Resources; PEA Completion Targeted for Q4 2025
VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Aug. 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Fortuna Mining Corp. (NYSE: FSM | TSX: FVI) is pleased to report an updated Mineral Resource estimate as of July 7, 2025, for the Diamba Sud Gold Project located in Senegal. All dollar amounts in this news release are expressed in US dollars. Highlights of the Inpit Mineral Resource Update Indicated Mineral Resource of 724,000 gold ounces, representing a 53 percent increase since year-end 2024 Inferred Mineral Resource of 285,000 gold ounces, reflecting a 93 percent increase since year-end 2024 Initial Inferred Mineral Resource estimates for the Southern Arc and Moungoundi deposits, containing 194,000 ounces and 31,000 ounces of gold, respectively Preliminary Economic Analysis (PEA) underway, with completion targeted for the fourth quarter of 2025 Exploration drilling at Southern Arc continues focusing on: Infilling drilling to upgrade Inferred Resources Expansion drilling where mineralization remains open at shallow depths to the south and east of the defined deposit limits Diamba Sud Gold Project, Senegal Fortuna estimates that the Diamba Sud Gold Project comprises an Indicated Mineral Resource of 14.2 Mt at an average gold grade of 1.59 g/t, containing 724,000 ounces of gold, and an Inferred Mineral Resource of 6.2 Mt at an average gold grade of 1.44 g/t containing 285,000 ounces of gold. The updated Mineral Resource estimate is based on new drilling completed between July 2024 to July 2025, comprising 243 holes totaling 31,652 meters. The data collected improved the geological interpretation and resource modelling for Area A, Area D, Karakara, Western Splay, and Kassassoko. It also contributed to the expansion of Diamba Sud´s pipeline of emerging deposits, with the first-time resource estimates for Southern Arc and Moungoundi. Expansion drilling at these deposits, along with the drilling of new targets, is planned for the fourth quarter of 2025. Changes from the previous estimate are due to the following: Infill drilling at Area A, Area D, Karakara, Western Splay, and Kassassoko improved the geological interpretation and supported the conversion of Inferred Resources to Indicated Resources Exploration drilling at Southern Arc and Moungoundi resulted in the first-time estimation of Inferred Mineral Resources An increase in the long-term gold price assumption, now at $2,600/oz, along with refinements to projected mining and processing costs, contributed to updated pit shell optimization and cut-off grade determination Diamba Sud Gold Project Mineral Resources by deposit Mineral Resources – Indicated Contained Metal Classification Deposit Tonnes(000) Au(g/t) Au(koz) Indicated Area A 3,891 1.47 184 Area D 4,877 1.75 274 Karakara 2,476 1.79 143 Western Splay 1,615 1.65 86 Kassassoko 1,294 0.90 38 Total Indicated 14,153 1.59 724Mineral Resources – Inferred Contained Metal Classification Deposit Tonnes(000) Au(g/t) Au(koz) Inferred Area A 61 1.02 2 Area D 600 1.10 21 Karakara 510 1.61 26 Western Splay 101 2.11 7 Kassassoko 123 0.85 3 Southern Arc 3,854 1.57 194 Moungoundi 922 1.06 31 Total Inferred 6,171 1.44 285 Notes: Mineral Reserves and Mineral Resources are as defined by the 2014 CIM Definition Standards for Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves Mineral Resources are exclusive of Mineral Reserves. Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability. Factors that could materially affect the reported Mineral Resources include changes in metal price and exchange rate assumptions; changes in local interpretations of mineralization; changes to assumed metallurgical recoveries, mining dilution and recovery; and assumptions as to the continued ability to access the site, extend and/or retain mineral and surface rights, titles and permits, maintain environmental and other regulatory permits, and maintain the social license to operate. Mineral Resources are reported as of July 7, 2025. Mineral Resources for Diamba Sud are reported pit constrained on a 100% ownership basis at selective mining unit block sizes and at an incremental gold cutoff grade for oxide/transitional material of 0.31 g/t Au, with fresh material reported based on a cutoff of 0.35 g/t Au for Area A, 0.42 g/t Au for Area D, 0.35 g/t Au for Karakara, 0.41 g/t Au for Western Splay, 0.35 g/t Au for Kassassoko, 0.37 g/t Au for Southern Arc, and 0.39 g/t Au for Moungoundi in accordance with the varying ore differential parameters and varying metallurgical recoveries for oxide, transitional and fresh rock within pit shell optimizations, assuming a long-term gold metal price of $2,600/oz and metallurgical recoveries based on metallurgical testwork. Eric Chapman, P. Geo. (EGBC #36328), is the Qualified Person responsible for Mineral Resources, being an employee of Fortuna Mining Corp. Totals may not add due to rounding The Mineral Resource is comprised of seven deposits: Area A, Area D, Karakara, Western Splay, Kassassoko, Southern Arc, and Moungoundi. It incorporates data from a total of 1,178 diamond and reverse circulation (RC) drill holes, totaling 154,814 meters, completed at these deposits since 2019 (see Figure 1). Figure 1: Location of Deposits Included in the Mineral Resource EstimateAll RC drilling at Diamba Sud was conducted using a 5.25-inch face sampling pneumatic hammer, with samples collected into 60-liter plastic bags. To maintain sample integrity, sufficient air pressure was used to keep samples dry and prevent groundwater inflow. If water ingress exceeded air pressure capacity, RC drilling was halted, and drilling converted to diamond core tails. Samples were collected at 1-meter intervals from an onboard cyclone and split on site to produce two 1.5-kilogram sub-samples. The first sample was submitted for laboratory analysis, while the second was retained at the core yard as a field duplicate. The majority of diamond drill holes at Diamba Sud were drilled with either HQ or NQ sized diamond drill bits. Core was logged and marked for sampling using standard lengths of one meter or to geological boundaries as appropriate. Samples were cut into equal halves using a diamond saw. One half of the core was retained in the original core box and stored in a secure facility at the project site's core yard. The other half was sampled, catalogued, and placed into sealed bags which were securely stored on site until shipment. All RC and diamond core samples form Diamba Sud were shipped to ALS Global's laboratory in Kedougou, Senegal, for preparation and then sent, via commercial courier, to ALS's facility in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, for final analysis. Routine gold analysis was performed using a 50-gram charge with fire assay and atomic absorption finish. Quality control procedures included the systematic insertion of blanks, duplicates, and certified reference standards into the sample stream. Additionally, ALS implemented its own quality control protocols. The Mineral Resource estimate for Diamba Sud was prepared using data with an effective cut-off date of July 7, 2025. Three-dimensional wireframes were constructed for the host lithologies, including the weathering profile, as well as for mineralized zones. The mineralized envelopes were defined using nominal cut-off grades of approximately 0.1 g/t and 0.3 g/t Au, respectively. Wireframes for each mineralized envelope were used to select and flag drillhole samples. Samples were preferentially sampled at 1-meter intervals, regardless of drilling technique based on the deposit characteristics, and therefore composited to this length. Composites for each mineralized domain were evaluated both individually and collectively using histograms, log-probability plots, and box-and-whisker plots. Input composite data for each domain were assessed for outliers, and grade capping was applied on a semi-quantitative basis. This process was guided by statistical tools, including histograms, log-probability plots, and mean-variance plots. Grade caps were generally applied at or above the98th percentile. Where sufficient data existed, experimental semi-variograms were generated for each domain and modelled accordingly. These were typically characterized by a moderate to high nugget effect and two nested spherical structures. A block model was built for each of the Diamba Sud deposits. Models were aligned with the national UTM coordinate system used for the input data and were designed with block dimensions reflecting the likely selective mining unit. Mineralized wireframes were treated as hard boundaries during grade interpolation, meaning only assay data within each domain was used to interpolate grades within that domain. Grade interpolation was performed using either inverse distance weighting or ordinary kriging, depending on the quality and robustness of the modeled variograms. The Qualified Person considers the interpolation methods appropriate for the style of mineralization at Diamba Sud. All estimates were carried out on a parent block basis. Estimation search parameters were informed by Kriging Neighborhood Analysis (KNA), utilizing a single-block KNA approach within well-drilled areas. An oriented ellipsoid search was applied to select composites for interpolation, with orientations derived from variogram models. Gold grade estimation was completed using a three-pass search strategy within each mineralized domain, based on the respective variogram ranges. Fixed bulk density values were assigned by lithology and weathering profile, based on more than 25,000 water immersion measurements of drill core collected across the Diamba Sud property. Initial validation of the block models included checks for unestimated mineralized blocks, incorrect or missing density assignments, and verification that no mineralized blocks or blocks with density values were present above the topographic surface. Visual validation included comparing the estimated block model grades to the composite grades for a series of cross sections sliced through each of the deposits. Following the initial validation checks, swath plots were generated along the three principal axes to assess the representativeness of the estimated grade profiles relative to the input composite grades. These plots were prepared on a per-domain basis for each mineralized solid and demonstrate a satisfactory correlation between the estimated grades and the underlying composite data, supporting the reliability of the grade interpolation. Mineral Resource classification considered several aspects affecting confidence in the estimation including geological continuity; data density and orientation; data accuracy and precision; and grade continuity. Indicated Mineral Resources have relied on a drilling grid of approximately 25 meters, with Inferred Mineral Resources based on an approximate 50-meter grid. Mineral Resources are reported on a 100 percent ownership basis, using block sizes consistent with the anticipated selective mining unit. Resources are constrained by optimized pit shells and reported at incremental gold cut-off grades that reflect varying metallurgical recoveries and projected mining, processing, and general costs. A long-term gold price of $2,600 per ounce was assumed for pit optimization and economic evaluation. Qualified Person Eric Chapman, Senior Vice President, Technical Services, is a Professional Geoscientist of the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of the Province of British Columbia (Registration Number 36328) and a Qualified Person as defined by National Instrument 43-101- Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects. Mr. Chapman has reviewed and approved the scientific and technical information contained in this news release and has verified the underlying data. About Fortuna Mining Corp. Fortuna Mining Corp. is a Canadian precious metals mining company with three operating mines and a portfolio of exploration projects in Argentina, Côte d'Ivoire, Mexico, and Peru, as well as the Diamba Sud Gold Project in Senegal. Sustainability is at the core of our operations and stakeholder relationships. We produce gold and silver while creating long-term shared value through efficient production, environmental stewardship, and social responsibility. For more information, please visit our website at ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD Jorge A. Ganoza President, CEO, and DirectorFortuna Mining Corp. Investor Relations: Carlos Baca | info@ | | X | LinkedIn | YouTube Forward looking Statements This news release contains forward-looking statements which constitute 'forward-looking information' within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities legislation and 'forward-looking statements' within the meaning of the 'safe harbor' provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (collectively, 'Forward-looking Statements'). All statements included herein, other than statements of historical fact, are Forward-looking Statements and are subject to a variety of known and unknown risks and uncertainties which could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those reflected in the Forward-looking Statements. The Forward-looking Statements in this news release may include, without limitation, the Mineral Resource estimates at Diamba Sud; the Company's proposed exploration plans at Diamba Sud; statements that a preliminary economic analysis is expected to be completed in the fourth quarter of 2025; statements about the Company's business strategies, plans and outlook; the Company's plans for its mines and mineral properties; changes in general economic conditions and financial markets; the impact of inflationary pressures on the Company's business and operations; the future results of exploration activities; expectations with respect to metal grade estimates and the impact of any variations relative to metals grades experienced; assumed and future metal prices; the merit of the Company's mines and mineral properties; and the future financial or operating performance of the Company. Often, but not always, these Forward-looking Statements can be identified by the use of words such as 'estimated', 'potential', 'open', 'future', 'assumed', 'projected', 'proposed', 'used', 'detailed', 'has been', 'gain', 'planned', 'reflecting', 'will', 'anticipated', 'estimated' 'containing', 'remaining', 'to be', or statements that events, 'could' or 'should' occur or be achieved and similar expressions, including negative variations. Forward-looking Statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance, or achievements of the Company to be materially different from any results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the Forward-looking Statements. Such uncertainties and factors include, among others, operational risks associated with mining and mineral processing; uncertainty relating to Mineral Resource and Mineral Reserve estimates; uncertainty relating to capital and operating costs, production schedules and economic returns; risks relating to the Company's ability to replace its Mineral Reserves; risks related to the conversion of Mineral Resources to Mineral Reserves; risks associated with mineral exploration and project development; uncertainty relating to the repatriation of funds as a result of currency controls; environmental matters including obtaining or renewing environmental permits and potential liability claims; uncertainty relating to nature and climate conditions; laws and regulations regarding the protection of the environment (including greenhouse gas emission reduction and other decarbonization requirements and the uncertainty surrounding the interpretation of omnibus Bill C-59 and the related amendments to the Competition Act (Canada); risks associated with political instability and changes to the regulations governing the Company's business operations; changes in national and local government legislation, taxation, controls, regulations and political or economic developments in countries in which the Company does or may carry on business; risks associated with war, hostilities or other conflicts, such as the Ukrainian – Russian, and Israeli – Hamas conflicts, and the impacts they may have on global economic activity; risks relating to the termination of the Company's mining concessions in certain circumstances; developing and maintaining relationships with local communities and stakeholders; risks associated with losing control of public perception as a result of social media and other web-based applications; potential opposition to the Company's exploration, development and operational activities; risks related to the Company's ability to obtain adequate financing for planned exploration and development activities; property title matters; risks related to the ability to retain or extend title to the Company's mineral properties; risks relating to the integration of businesses and assets acquired by the Company; impairments; risks associated with climate change legislation; reliance on key personnel; adequacy of insurance coverage; operational safety and security risks; legal proceedings and potential legal proceedings; uncertainties relating to general economic conditions; risks relating to a global pandemic, which could impact the Company's business, operations, financial condition and share price; competition; fluctuations in metal prices; risks associated with entering into commodity forward and option contracts for base metals production; fluctuations in currency exchange rates and interest rates; tax audits and reassessments; risks related to hedging; uncertainty relating to concentrate treatment charges and transportation costs; sufficiency of monies allotted by the Company for land reclamation; risks associated with dependence upon information technology systems, which are subject to disruption, damage, failure and risks with implementation and integration; labor relations issues; as well as those factors discussed under 'Risk Factors' in the Company's Annual Information Form for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024. Although the Company has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual actions, events, or results to differ materially from those described in Forward-looking Statements, there may be other factors that cause actions, events or results to differ from those anticipated, estimated or intended. Forward-looking Statements contained herein are based on the assumptions, beliefs, expectations and opinions of management, including, but not limited to, the accuracy of the Company's current Mineral Resource and Mineral Reserve estimates; that the Company's activities will be conducted in accordance with the Company's public statements and stated goals; that there will be no material adverse change affecting the Company, its properties or its production estimates (which assume accuracy of projected ore grade, mining rates, recovery timing, and recovery rate estimates and may be impacted by unscheduled maintenance, labor and contractor availability and other operating or technical difficulties); the duration and effect of global and local inflation; the duration and impacts of geo-political uncertainties on the Company's production, workforce, business, operations and financial condition; the expected trends in mineral prices, inflation and currency exchange rates; that all required approvals and permits will be obtained for the Company's business and operations on acceptable terms; that there will be no significant disruptions affecting the Company's operations and such other assumptions as set out herein. Forward-looking Statements are made as of the date hereof and the Company disclaims any obligation to update any Forward-looking Statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or results or otherwise, except as required by law. There can be no assurance that these Forward-looking Statements will prove to be accurate, as actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Accordingly, investors should not place undue reliance on Forward-looking Statements. Cautionary Note to United States Investors Concerning Estimates of Reserves and Resources All reserve and resource estimates included in this news release have been prepared in accordance with National Instrument 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101") and the Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy, and Petroleum Definition Standards on Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves. NI 43-101 is a rule developed by the Canadian Securities Administrators that establishes standards for public disclosure by a Canadian company of scientific and technical information concerning mineral projects. All Mineral Reserve and Mineral Resource estimates contained in the technical disclosure have been prepared in accordance with NI 43-101 and the Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum Definition Standards on Mineral Resources and Reserves. Canadian standards, including NI 43-101, differ significantly from the requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission, and mineral reserve and resource information included in this news release may not be comparable to similar information disclosed by U.S. companies. A photo accompanying this announcement is available at PDF available:
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Evaluating Jumia: Africa's E-commerce Leader or Investment Risk?
Jumia's Position in the Global E-Commerce Ecosystem Jumia Technologies AG (NYSE: JMIA) was once heralded as the Amazon of Africa. Its IPO in 2019 generated tremendous excitement as it became the first African tech startup listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Fast forward to 2025, and the narrative has changed. Trading at just $4.45, a steep fall from its all-time high of $65, Jumia has been stuck in a prolonged drawdown, prompting investors to ask: is it a hidden gem or a value trap? To answer this, we will critically analyze not just Jumia's internal metrics (growth efficiency, fintech integration, logistics complexity, and per-user economics) but also its standing relative to similar platforms in emerging markets like Sea Limited (SE) in Southeast Asia and MercadoLibre (MELI) in Latin America. All three operate in regions with young populations, rising internet penetration, and fragmented physical retail systemsbut their execution has sharply diverged. The goal is to determine whether Jumia is undervaluedor fundamentally flawed. Growth Metrics and Business Model Efficiency Company Market Cap TTM Revenue EBITDA Margin Net Income Margin Gross Margin E-commerce + Fintech Combo Jumia (JMIA) ~$320M ~$295M Negative Negative ~33% Yes (JumiaPay) Sea Limited (SE) ~$26B ~$13.1B Slightly Positive Negative ~40% Yes (Shopee + SeaMoney) MercadoLibre (MELI) ~$75B ~$14.5B ~12% ~4% ~48% Yes (MercadoPago) While Jumia shares a similar business blueprintoffering online marketplace services integrated with a fintech/payments layerits unit economics remain substantially weaker. Jumia continues to post EBITDA and net income losses, even after it exited underperforming markets and shifted its business model toward an asset-light strategy. Both Sea and MercadoLibre, in comparison, have leveraged fintech operations to scale beyond their core e-commerce businesses. Sea's Shopee dominates Southeast Asia, while MercadoLibre's MercadoPago is increasingly becoming a fintech powerhouse in Latin America. JumiaPay, despite similar ambitions, has failed to gain meaningful traction, primarily due to limited banking penetration and inconsistent regulatory frameworks across African markets. Logistics and Regional Complexity Unlike its peers, Jumia operates in perhaps the most logistically and politically fragmented region of the three. MercadoLibre operates in Latin America, where delivery infrastructure, while uneven, is more integrated. Sea Limited operates in a mix of urbanized and rural Southeast Asian countries, but benefits from strong partnerships and high smartphone adoption. Jumia, on the other hand, must navigate 16 African countries, each with distinct regulatory regimes, underdeveloped roads, unstable currencies, and low trust in digital transactions. To mitigate these challenges, Jumia built a proprietary logistics platform early on, now boasting 600+ logistics partners and hundreds of pickup stations. However, this has also become a capital-intensive burden with limited payoff so far. Recent efforts to pivot toward a third-party logistics model may offer relief, but the execution risk remains elevated. User and Revenue Growth Trends In terms of annual active users, Jumia has stagnated: Jumia: Hovering around 34 million annual active consumers, with Gross Merchandise Volume (GMV) contracting in some quarters. Sea (Shopee): Boasts over 350 million users across Southeast Asia and Taiwan. MercadoLibre: Exceeds 140 million users, with consistent year-over-year growth across GMV and net revenues. From the way I look at it, this disparity suggests Jumia is struggling to achieve flywheel momentum. Customer acquisition costs remain high, and repeat user behavior is not well-established. Meanwhile, MercadoLibre and Shopee are compounding network effects by cross-selling services like credit, buy-now-pay-later (BNPL), and digital wallets to their loyal user bases. Valuation: Cheap for a Reason? On a price-to-sales (P/S) basis, Jumia appears cheap: JMIA: ~1.1x SE: ~2.0x MELI: ~5.2x But this apparent discount is misleading. Investors price risk, scalability, and capital efficiency into the multiple. Both SE and MELI are demonstrating operational leverage and fintech synergy, while JMIA continues to burn cash with no near-term path to profitability. Also, while JMIA's share price decline suggests deep value, its market cap (~$320M) reflects continued dilution risk, execution uncertainty, and macro fragility. Per-User Valuation and Revenue EfficiencyOne way to understand Jumia's valuation is by examining what investors are effectively paying per customer and how much revenue each user brings in. With around 3.5 million active annual users and a market capital of roughly $320 million, Jumia is currently valued at approximately $91 per the past year, Jumia generated around $295 million in revenue, translating to an average revenue per user (ARPU) of approximately $ we compare this to others operating in similar emerging markets:1. Shopee (Sea Ltd) with over 350 million users and earns roughly $13.1 billion in revenue, resulting in an ARPU close to $37.2. MercadoLibre with around 140 million users and $14.5 billion in revenue, giving it an ARPU of about $ paper, Jumia's ARPU appears reasonable, especially for a company operating across diverse and infrastructure-limited African markets. But a deeper look reveals challenges. The company is still operating at a loss, with little evidence of sustainable monetization. The relatively high price investors are paying per userrelative to how much each user brings inraises a valid concern: revenue alone won't justify the valuation unless Jumia can drive repeat engagement, cut costs, and attain meaningful margin improvements. Macro Headwinds: Africa vs. LatAm and SEA Africa's economic promise is counterbalanced by structural hurdles: Currency devaluations (e.g., Nigerian Naira) have destroyed purchasing power. High inflation and low GDP per capita limit consumer spending. Political instability and inconsistent regulation make long-term planning difficult. Both Latin America and Southeast Asia suffer similar risksbut they have larger middle classes, more digitally literate consumers, and more favorable trade and finance ecosystems. This allows companies like MELI and SE to better absorb macro shocks. Strategic Shifts and Management Reset To its credit, Jumia has abandoned its previous model, choosing instead to operate a lean, third-party marketplace focused on unit profitability. Under the new leadership team installed in 2022, the company has: Cut non-core markets and headcount Reduced fulfillment overhead Prioritized high-margin categories (e.g., electronics, fashion) These moves have reduced quarterly losses, but they have yet to translate into positive operating income or meaningful user the Gurus and Insiders Are (Not) DoingA glance at recent filings shows that most well-known value investors have stayed on the sidelines when it relates to Jumia. This in comparison to its peers is different. MercadoLibre have seen interest from seasoned names such as Chase Coleman (Trades, Portfolio) and Ron Baron (Trades, Portfolio).Within Jumia itself, insider transactions offer little encouragement. There have been no significant open-market purchases or strategic stock accumulations in recent quarters. For investors, that absence may send a signal of its own, that even Jumia's management is exercising caution in committing fresh other e-commerce operators in similarly volatile regions have witnessed internal buying and long-term holder support. The fact that Jumia hasn't attracted the same level of conviction could reflect broader doubts around its roadmap, especially given continued operating losses and macro headwinds in key regions like Nigeria and Egypt.I believe, until the right stakeholders start showing confidence through action, not just rhetoric, many investors may remain hesitant to treat Jumia as anything more than a high-risk outlier in a high-growth sector. Conclusion: Hidden Gem or Value Trap? Jumia's stock is down over 95% from its highs, and the company trades at a fraction of its peers' valuation multiples. But the underlying reason is clear: lack of profitability, slow user growth, and uncertain market execution. Compared to MercadoLibre and Sea Limited, which operate in equally challenging geographies but have found sustainable ways to scale, Jumia appears to be years behind on both growth and monetization curves. Still, for long-term investors willing to stomach volatility and geopolitical risk, Jumia offers an asymmetric bet on the future of African commerce. The key lies in execution. If Jumia can unlock its fintech arm, achieve logistics scalability, and improve repeat customer rates, the upside from current levels could be considerable. Until then, however, it remains a high-risk speculative play, better suited to opportunistic entries and tight position sizing than core portfolio allocation. That said, the long-term thesis remains alive. With operations in 11 countries and a proprietary logistics network spanning over 600 partners, Jumia holds one of the broadest e-commerce footprints on the continenta potential first-mover advantage if Africa's consumer infrastructure reaches scale. The company has entered key urban markets and offers a rare public vehicle for exposure to African e-commerce. If it can unlock JumiaPay, improve customer retention, and reach operating leverage, the upside could be substantial In summary, On paper, Jumia's valuation appears attractiveespecially relative to its peers. But that discount reflects justified concerns about profitability, market volatility, and execution risk. The gap isn't just about opportunity; it's also about uncertainty. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data