Remgro, the holding company controlled by Johann Rupert, has raised R4.88bn through the disposal of just under 52 million FirstRand shares in on-market transactions conducted between 2 February and 10 March 2026. The shares were sold at an average price of R93.87 each, with the proceeds earmarked to bolster Remgro’s strategic cash reserves. The sale represents a continuation of a disposal programme that began following the unbundling of Remgro’s indirect interest in FirstRand — historically held through RMB Holdings — in June 2020, at which point Remgro retained a direct residual stake of 3.92% that it had already classified as non-core. By June 2025, that holding had been reduced to 1.64%, and the latest transaction reduces it further still.
The decision to monetise the remaining FirstRand exposure reflects a deliberate capital allocation strategy at Remgro, which has been actively reorienting its portfolio away from legacy financial services holdings towards a tighter cluster of core operating investments. Remgro’s current portfolio spans healthcare through Mediclinic, beverages through Heineken, insurance through OUTsurance, energy through TotalEnergies, media through eMedia, and food production through RCL Foods and Rainbow Chicken, among others. The accumulation of strategic cash gives the group the flexibility to pursue new opportunities or deepen existing positions without reliance on external financing.
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The transaction comes at a moment of considerable momentum for the broader Rupert family empire. According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, the Rupert family added approximately $5.3bn to their net worth in 2025, lifting the family’s total valuation to around $18.9bn and placing them within striking distance of the global top 100 wealthiest. Richemont, the Swiss luxury goods group in which the family holds a commanding interest, surged close to 30% over the year. Remgro itself gained 16% over the same period, reaching a market capitalisation of approximately R95bn, while Reinet — the family’s Luxembourg-based investment vehicle — rose 25%.
The wealth accumulation has been accompanied by a meaningful strategic pivot away from tobacco, the industry that originally built the Rupert dynasty.
Reinet completed the sale of its 43.3 million shares in British American Tobacco in January 2025, generating proceeds of approximately £1.22bn and formally ending a generational association with the tobacco sector. The family’s connection to the industry stretches back to the 1940s, when patriarch Anton Rupert founded the Voorbrand Tobacco Company — later known as Rembrandt — which listed on the JSE in 1956 and expanded aggressively into banking, mining and financial services. By 1999, the tobacco operations had been folded into British American Tobacco through a merger with Rothmans International, at the time the world’s fourth-largest cigarette producer. The full exit from BAT last year drew a definitive line under that chapter of the family’s commercial history.
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