Naspers and its European spin-off, Prosus, expect full-year core headline earnings to jump by up to 28%.
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General Atlantic is backing Westcon-Comstor as investor and lender, freeing R7.1-billion for a planned special dividend.
Meta Platforms’ paid WhatsApp messaging tier adds stickers, themes and custom icons for R28.99/month.
Visa is readying South African banks for AI shopping agents, and its OpenAI deal adds further momentum.
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Telkom expects to report an improvement of about 200% in full-year normalised headline earnings per share.
TymeBank is raising $150-million to build scale as it prepares for an initial public offering, its CEO said.
Average monthly capacity additions from February to April dropped to 26MW from 97MW a year ago.
Apple has become the first brand to cross $1-trillion in brand value, Kantar’s BrandZ has found.
Industry lobby group ACT has urged Icasa to practice “regulatory forbearance” to ease the impact of load shedding.
Global markets are on tenterhooks ahead of a US Federal Reserve interest rate decision and key US inflation figures.
World News
Walt Disney Co’s quarterly results show a path for signing up a quarter of a billion subscribers: international expansion. But investors are now asking, at what cost?
Safaricom is encouraged by the positive outlook in Ethiopia and plans to start operations there this year, its CEO said.
Toyota rolled out its first mass-produced battery electric car in Japan on Thursday for lease only, a strategy that has raised analysts’ eyebrows.
Google and MultiChoice-owned SuperSport have flagged an interest in bidding for the broadcast rights of the Indian Premier League, sources said.
My thoughts tend to go to dark places these days. And so when I watched Google on Wednesday trot out one after another of its homegrown computing devices for every task and every nook of our homes, I went straight to dystopia
Here are two facts that defy logic: by the end of the year, electric car maker Tesla will have burned through more than US$10bn without ever having made 10c. Yet companies around the world are lining up to compete

































