A South African court has granted an interdict against businessman Ralebala Matome Mampeule following defamatory allegations made against Public Investment Corporation (PIC) chair and Deputy Finance Minister David Masondo, in a ruling that Masondo says carries implications far beyond the individuals involved.
Writing to the Sunday Times this week, Masondo framed the court’s decision as a reaffirmation of a principle that sits at the core of how the PIC operates: that entities which receive financing from the fund — and by extension from the retirement savings of South Africa’s public servants — carry an obligation that cannot be discharged through accusations of corruption when repayment becomes inconvenient. “When borrowers fail to service their obligations and instead respond with allegations of corruption against the institution that financed them,” Masondo wrote, “the issue transcends a private dispute.”
The PIC manages assets on behalf of the Government Employees’ Pension Fund and several other public funds, with assets under management growing from R2.5 trillion in 2022 to R3.7 trillion today — a R1.2 trillion increase that Masondo describes as a direct gain for South African workers. The fund’s beneficiaries include teachers, nurses and police officers whose retirement security depends on the careful deployment of capital across both listed and unlisted investments.
The PIC’s unlisted investment portfolio delivered a 16% internal rate of return in the most recent reporting period, exceeding its benchmark. The portfolio facilitated 194,274 direct jobs in 2025, and Masondo used a straightforward illustration to bring the numbers into focus: a R100 billion investment generated R16 billion in returns for workers. These figures come against a backdrop of institutional reform that has been underway since the Mpati Commission of Inquiry exposed governance weaknesses that, in Masondo’s words, “were uncomfortable, but necessary.”
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That commission, which reported in 2020, forced a national reckoning with how one of the country’s most consequential financial institutions was being run. In the years since, the PIC has tightened governance frameworks, strengthened oversight mechanisms and reinforced its risk management architecture. Masondo is candid that this has been unglamorous work. “It is the steady, technocratic work of institutional reconstruction,” he wrote — work that does not generate headlines but determines whether the institution can be trusted with the savings of millions.
The quality of the PIC’s investment team forms part of Masondo’s case for the institution’s credibility. Close to 70% of investment professionals at the PIC carry between 11 and 20 or more years of experience. The team holds 180 formal qualifications, including 149 honours degrees and 68 master’s degrees concentrated in finance and economics. Among them are 21 Chartered Financial Analysts and 29 Chartered Accountants. Masondo is clear that investment decisions at the PIC are not concentrated in any single individual — legal, risk, ESG and ethics functions all form part of the assurance framework that governs how capital is deployed.
On the question of public scrutiny, Masondo draws a careful distinction. He accepts that an institution managing public funds must remain subject to public oversight, stating plainly that “institutions entrusted with public funds must always operate under the watchful eye of the public.” What he rejects is scrutiny that is not grounded in evidence — particularly when it originates from parties who have received investment from the fund and are resisting accountability for their own financial obligations. The court’s interdict, in his reading, affirms that accountability runs in both directions.
The broader stakes are considerable. South Africa’s pension system remains one of the most structurally important elements of the country’s financial architecture, and the PIC sits at its centre. Any sustained reputational damage to the institution carries risks that extend well beyond its own balance sheet. Masondo concluded his statement with a direct articulation of intent: the PIC’s goal is to evolve into a world-class asset manager, one that protects workers’ savings whilst contributing responsibly to economic growth. “That is the responsibility entrusted to us,” he wrote. “And it is a responsibility we intend to uphold.”
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