South Africa, 24 February 2026: In the South African investment community, “SA Inc” has long been shorthand for locally-listed companies whose fortunes rise and fall with the domestic economy; the banks, insurers, retailers, and homegrown industrials that depend on what happens inside the country’s borders. Yet until now, gaining precise, cost-effective exposure to this theme has been easier said than done. Satrix is changing that with the listing of the new Satrix SA Inc Actively Managed ETF (JSE code: STXSAI) on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. 

The fund tracks the proprietary Satrix SA Inc Index, a rules-based index that weights companies according to the proportion of their revenue earned in South Africa. The result is a diversified portfolio of approximately 50 stocks that dials up exposure to companies most closely tied to the local economy, offered at a Total Expense Ratio (TER) of just 0.35%.

Siyabulela Nomoyi, Quantitative Portfolio Manager at Satrix, says the fund fills a gap in the local ETF landscape that has existed for some time.

Closing The SA Inc Gap

“When you hear the term ‘SA Inc’, it refers to stocks whose earnings are predominantly tied to the South African economy. These are sectors like banking, insurance, retail, construction, and locally-focused industrials,” explains Nomoyi. “Portfolio managers and analysts reference it all the time, but for ordinary investors, actually capturing that exposure has been difficult. You would need the data, the stock-picking ability, and the time to do it yourself. This ETF does that work for you in a single click.” 

Why The Timing Is Right

The investment case for SA Inc stocks often hinges on macroeconomic catalysts, and Nomoyi believes several are currently aligning in South Africa’s favour.

“We have seen improvements in electricity supply, rail and port infrastructure is getting better, there is a degree of political stability, and business confidence is growing,” he explains. “When reforms materialise, and macro indicators improve, that feeds directly into SA Inc stocks. We saw this clearly when the Government of National Unity was formed in 2024; SA Inc stocks rallied significantly off that sentiment. This fund is designed to capture exactly that kind of movement.”

The fund also offers, as Nomoyi describes, a natural currency complement. While the Satrix JSE Global Equity ETF, which tracks the FTSE/JSE Global Investor Index, upweights inward-listed companies with strong rand-hedge characteristics that typically do well when the currency weakens, the Satrix SA Inc AMETF generally works in the opposite direction, performing best when the rand appreciates and local economic conditions improve.

Active Management At An Indexation Price

Despite carrying the Actively Managed ETF (AMETF) label, the Satrix SA Inc AMETF is offered at a TER of just 0.35%, a figure that defies the high-fee expectations typically associated with a niche investment strategy. 

Nomoyi explains that this is possible because the fund sits firmly in the rules-based segment of what he calls the “investment spectrum.”

“At one end, you have vanilla index trackers, which are simple, market-cap-weighted, and ultra-low-cost. At the other end, you have full active management where portfolio managers make discretionary calls, and you pay a premium for that. This fund sits in the middle: it’s 100% rules-based and systematic, which keeps costs down, but it goes beyond vanilla market-cap index tracking by including revenue data in the selection and weighting of the stocks,” he explains.

The fund first considers large- and mid-cap stocks in its selection, and thereafter considers the next-largest stocks. The fund may therefore also have small-cap exposure too. 

“Fees matter enormously over the long term,” Nomoyi cautions. “Inasmuch as returns compound, so do fees, on the negative side. Over 20 to 30 years, a 1% to 2% fee can erode up to 40% of your investment value. At 35 basis points, the impact is significantly lower, and that’s a meaningful advantage for long-term investors.”

A Building Block, Not A Silver Bullet

While the SA Inc theme is compelling, Nomoyi is careful to position the fund as one component of a broader portfolio strategy rather than a standalone solution.

Nomoyi concludes by saying that “Many retail investors think they are diversified because they hold ten funds, but there is often significant overlap. True diversification means thinking about local versus offshore, across asset classes, and across themes like SA Inc versus globally-exposed stocks. If that local economic exposure is important to you and it brings genuine diversification to your portfolio, then the Satrix SA Inc AMETF should absolutely be part of your investment strategy.”

 

Disclaimer: 

Satrix Managers (RF) (Pty) Ltd is a registered and approved Manager in Collective Investment Schemes in Securities. Collective investment schemes are generally medium- to long-term investments. With Unit Trusts, Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) and Actively Managed ETFs (AMETFs) the investor essentially owns a “proportionate share” (in proportion to the participatory interest held in the fund) of the underlying investments held by the fund. With Unit Trusts, the investor holds participatory units issued by the fund while in the case of ETFs and AMETFs, the participatory interest, while issued by the fund, comprises a listed security traded on the stock exchange.  ETFs and AMETFs are registered as a Collective Investment and can be traded by any stockbroker on the stock exchange, LISP platforms and or via online trading platforms. ETFs and AMETFs may incur additional costs due to being listed on the JSE. Past performance is not necessarily a guide to future performance, and the value of investments / units may go up or down. A schedule of fees and charges, and maximum commissions are available on the Minimum Disclosure Document or upon request from the Manager. Collective investments are traded at ruling prices and can engage in borrowing and scrip lending. Should the respective portfolio engage in scrip lending, the utility percentage and related counterparties can be viewed on the ETF and AMETF Minimum Disclosure Document. AMETFs are ETFs which are actively traded by a Portfolio Manager to adjust the AMETF holdings and asset allocation with the aim to outperform the benchmark. AMETFs differ from ETFs which only track indices. The Manager does not provide any guarantee, either with respect to the capital or the return of a portfolio. The index, the applicable tracking error and the portfolio performance relative to the index can be viewed on the ETF and AMETF Minimum Disclosure Document and/or on https://satrix.co.za/products.