Cashbuild reports solid headline earnings growth

Loading player...
With revenue rising 3% to R6.3 billion, headline earnings per share surging 18%, and interim dividends up 21%, Cashbuild has delivered resilient results in a South African DIY and home improvement market still shaped by cautious consumer spending, rising living costs, and slow construction activity. Despite economic headwinds, the group has managed to maintain its 25% gross margin target, grow transaction volumes by 4%, and expand its store footprint, signalling strong execution in a competitive retail environment. Shane Thoresson, Chief Operating Officergrowth helps us understand what this really tell us about consumer behaviour in the South African building and DIY market right now.
5 Mar 12PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

PIVOT POINT: Leading SARS Forward

Newly appointed SARS Commissioner Dr. Johnstone Makhubu reflects on his journey through public finance, his early priorities, the compliance challenges ahead, and how SARS is preparing for a digital, cross‑border tax future.
7 May 4PM 35 min

Global Surge, Local Grind: April’s market review

Global equities delivered their strongest month since 2020, powered by megacap tech, while the JSE eked out a modest gain. Anchor Capital’s Peter Little joins us for his April review of markets.
7 May 4PM 14 min

How to Build Tax‑Free Wealth

TFSAs remain one of SA’s most powerful wealth-building tools—if used correctly. Vutlhari Nkuna from Concept Wealth explains contribution limits, lifetime caps, common mistakes, and how to choose the right long‑term investment mix.
7 May 4PM 11 min

Fuel spikes SA farming pressures.

Diesel is up more than R12/liter since January, squeezing margins across the agricultural value chain. FNB’s Paul Makube explains the impact on grains, livestock, and exports.
7 May 4PM 15 min

How Fuel Prices Shape SA’s Economy

Independent economist John Loos breaks down the ripple effects of fuel price hikes on households, inflation, retail, property, and the Reserve Bank’s policy path.
6 May 5PM 15 min