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Youth Month: Waiting 10 years to invest could cost you R650,000

investing

 

For many young South Africans, financial priorities such as paying off student debt, covering rising living expenses and supporting family members often take precedence over investing and retirement planning.

 

However, financial experts say delaying investment decisions can come at a significant cost.

 

According to Lungile Macuacua, Portfolio Analyst at 1nvest, time is one of the most valuable assets in long-term wealth creation.

 

“The scarcest resource in building wealth is not capital, it is time. Unlike money, time cannot be earned back later. The earlier you start investing, the more opportunity your money has to benefit from compounding and long-term market growth,” says Macuacua.

 

Compounding allows investment returns to generate additional returns over time, meaning investments can grow significantly the longer they remain invested.

 

A practical example highlights the impact of starting early. Two investors each contribute R1,000 per month to a diversified portfolio earning an estimated real return of 4.8% annually. One begins investing at age 25 and continues until retirement at 65, while the other waits until age 35.

 

By retirement, the first investor could accumulate about R1.45 million in today’s money, compared with approximately R800,000 for the investor who started 10 years later. The delay results in a difference of around R650,000.

 

Even postponing investment by five years could reduce retirement savings by roughly R360,000.

 

Macuacua says many people delay investing because they are waiting for a higher income, greater financial knowledge or more favourable market conditions.

 

“Historically, time in the market has proven to be far more valuable than trying to time the market. The sooner you begin, the greater the potential benefit of compounding over the long term,” she says.

 

She adds that investing does not require specialist stock-picking skills. Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) offer investors access to diversified portfolios that can include hundreds of companies across multiple sectors and markets through a single investment.

 

According to Macuacua, young investors should focus on investing regularly, diversifying their portfolios and aligning investments with long-term financial goals.

 

Accessibility has also improved significantly in recent years, making it easier for South Africans to start investing with relatively small amounts.

 

Glenn Grimley, Head of Stash at Liberty Group, says one of the biggest misconceptions is that investors need a substantial lump sum before they can begin building wealth.

 

“Small amounts invested regularly can become meaningful over time because of the impact of compounding,” says Grimley.

 

He recommends starting with an affordable monthly contribution, automating deposits and selecting investments that match individual goals and risk tolerance.

 

Financial experts also stress that wealth creation should be accompanied by wealth protection.

 

Unexpected events such as illness, disability, loss of income or death can have a major impact on long-term financial plans. Products such as life cover, disability cover and income protection can help safeguard financial progress and protect dependants.

 

As South Africa marks Youth Month, experts are encouraging young adults to begin investing as early as possible, even if they can only contribute small amounts initially.

 

“The good news is that you do not need to be wealthy to begin building wealth. You simply need to start,” says Grimley.

 

The message from financial planners is clear: while markets may fluctuate and personal circumstances may change, time lost can never be recovered. Starting sooner rather than later could make a substantial difference to future financial security.

Salt River Market site officially handed over for affordable housing development

salt river

 

Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis has officially handed over the City’s flagship Salt River Market site for the construction of 970 inner-city affordable housing units by developer Communicare.

 

The development will include 300 social housing rental units and 670 affordable market units and is among four inner-city sites where construction is set to begin this year.

 

In total, over 3,000 affordable units are set to be built this year, including over 1,500 social housing rental apartments. This would include the sites at Newmarket Street (Foreshore), Pickwick Street (Salt River) and Fruit & Veg (in Zonnebloem, CBD).

 

Hill-Lewis says the City is pleased to have reached the stage at which the handover of the site is possible.

 

It follows a multi‑year social facilitation process to resolve unlawful occupation at the site. This included the relocation of 70 informal households to upgraded accommodation in the Maitland area in May.

 

‘Construction is now set to commence here, and on three other central Cape Town inner-city sites this year. These are the visible results of our accelerated land release programme taking shape, creating thousands of affordable housing opportunities for Cape Town families in the CBD and other well-located parts of our city. This is how we are making under-used public assets work for Capetonians, with a broader land release pipeline of over 12 000 affordable housing units in various well-located parts of the metro.’

 

The development is being carried out through a public‑private partnership model, with the City contributing land at a 90% discount (around R95 million in total subsidy).

 

The completed Salt River Market development will offer affordable rental options to households earning up to approximately R34 400 per month.

 

It will also deliver rentals ranging from approximately R700 to R10 000 per month across unit types.

 

Chairperson of Communicare, Mark van Wyk, says the plan is to develop the ground floor as retail, a piazza, a day care facility and a sports field.

‘The Salt River Hall will also be restored and preserved for its heritage value. Honouring the origins of the market, our development plans include making provision for the four long-standing fresh produce traders to continue to operate at the Salt River Market.’

 

salt river
Handover (from left): Nolwandle Gqiba, Executive Director City of Cape Town Human Settlements Directorate, Mark van Wyk, Chairperson Communicare, Anthea Houston, CEO of Communicare, Mayco Member for Human Settlements, Councillor Carl Pophaim, Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis, City Councillor Ian McMahon.

Another teen girl killed in Atlantis shooting

manenberg

 

 

Another teenage girl has been killed in Atlantis, three months after a similar incident in the region.  

 

On Saturday, a 15-year-old girl was shot and killed after being caught in crossfire in Sherwood Park. A 48-year-old was injured in that shooting.  

 

Detectives in Atlantis confirmed that no arrests have been made at this stage, as a murder and attempted murder docket is being investigated.  

 

The local Community Policing Forum (CPF) said the hearts of locals are heavy following the incident. And while police have yet to confirm what it suspects the motive behind the attack is, the Atlantis CPF’s Noel Cloete suspects gang violence is the cause. 

 

“A fifteen-year-old girl who lost her life due to these senseless acts of gang violence in our area. We as the community really need to stand together to put an end to this senseless acts and brutal acts of violence in our area,” said Cloete.  

 

The ward councillor, Allister Lightburn, reiterated the belief that the shooting was gang-related, noting that this incident comes amid rival gang shootings. He said the girl was coming from a church youth event at the time of the incident.  

 

He also remembered the shooting outside Atlantis Secondary School in February, in which a 14-year-old girl was killed.

  

ALSO READ:  Escalating gun violence in Atlantis; Two shot at the weekend – Smile 90.4FM

 

“This must be condemned in the strongest terms and the perpetrators should be brought [to] book. A family have been robbed of a daughter. Our plea is to our community to really unite and say enough is enough. We cannot allow criminals to rule over us and our children,” said Lightburn.   

[LISTEN] Your R60 A Year Will End Period Poverty – PERI🩸D!

Siv Ngesi & MENstruation Foundation fighting period poverty in South Africa

 

 

Imagine your daughter comes to you, looking down in shame. She tells you she has to miss a whole week of school. This is the heartbreaking reality of period poverty in South Africa—a crisis that forces millions of young girls to sacrifice their education every single month.

 

She isn’t sick. She wants to learn. But her body is doing what it naturally does, and you simply cannot afford pads. As a parent, you would tear down walls to protect your child’s education, yet this structural issue persists across the country.

 

Sanitary pads are not a luxury; they are a basic human right. To end period poverty in South Africa, we have to start looking at this as a national emergency rather than a taboo topic.

 

Starting the Uncomfortable Conversation

 

Siv Ngesi recently stopped by The Joy Ride with Angel Campey. He came to start a conversation that makes many people uncomfortable, but it is one we can no longer ignore. He didn’t come to tell jokes. Instead, he dropped a truth bomb that stays with you:

 

“If men bled once a month, period poverty wouldn’t be a thing.”

 

 

 

 

Siv is on a fierce mission. Through the MENstruation Foundation, his team is making affordable sanitary pads. Their goal is simple: ensure no girl is stripped of her dignity or her future.

It is time to stop looking away. If this were your daughter, what wouldn’t you do?

663 Ghanaian nationals repatriated from SA to Ghana

663 ghanaian nationals
Ghanaian nationals queue with their luggage at O.R. Tambo International Airport as they prepare to board a repatriation flight home following unrest concerns in Johannesburg, South Africa, Wednesday, May 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Kayleen Morgan)

 

The Commissioner of the Border Management Authority (BMA), Dr Michael Masiapato, has confirmed that 663 Ghanaian nationals were repatriated from South Africa to Ghana over the weekend.

 

On Saturday, a group of 332 Ghanaian nationals was brought to OR Tambo International Airport by the Ghanaian High Commission in Pretoria for repatriation.

 

According to the BMA, of the travellers processed, 170 were travelling on Ghanaian ordinary passports, while 162 were using Emergency Travel Certificates issued by the Ghanaian High Commission in Pretoria.

 

“Emergency Travel Certificates are single-use travel documents issued to facilitate the return of citizens to their country of origin,” added the BMA

 

During immigration processing, 321 travellers were also found to have overstayed their allocated period of stay in South Africa by 30 days or longer. Consequently, they were declared undesirable in terms of the Immigration Act.

 

Only 323 passengers were found eligible to depart and subsequently boarded a chartered flight arranged by the Government of Ghana through its High Commission in Pretoria. Meanwhile, nine passengers were, however, offloaded from the flight. These included two couples and their five children.

 

According to reports, one woman and a man were declared medically unfit to travel by airline personnel and were transferred to the airport clinic for further medical attention.

 

On Sunday, a further group of 331 Ghanaian nationals was brought to OR Tambo International Airport for repatriation.

 

Among those processed, 117 travellers were using Ghanaian ordinary passports, while 90 were travelling on Emergency Travel Certificates, and 37 minor children born in South Africa were also processed using Emergency Travel Certificates.

 

BMA Immigration officials further processed 25 asylum seekers, who voluntarily submitted withdrawal letters to cancel their asylum applications.

 

“During the verification process, 170 travellers were found to have overstayed their allocated period of stay in South Africa by 30 days or longer and were consequently declared undesirable.”

 

At the end of the process, 341 passengers, including 10 deportees brought by the Department of Home Affairs, were cleared for departure. One traveller did not check in.

 

READ MORE: Warning to employers who hire undocumented foreigners

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