South Africa’s water crisis is creating urgent infrastructure needs and a growing opportunity for private capital. Recent amendments to Treasury Regulation 16 by National Treasury simplify public-private partnerships by exempting projects under R2 billion from certain approvals. This significantly reduces delays and transaction costs, making smaller, high-impact water projects viable. The reforms enable aggregation through special purpose vehicles, allowing multiple projects to be financed as portfolios. As outlined by Chito Siame, Head: Private Equity at Mergence Investment Managers, these changes help turn water infrastructure into an investable asset class while accelerating delivery, improving service provision, and supporting sustainable, long-term returns for investors.
Rand resilience masks a fragile equilibrium
The rand’s recent resilience has surprised many, but it risks being misread. Strength in the currency over the past year
