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👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Canal+ goes to the JSE

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Canal+ lists on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange today, fulfilling a regulatory commitment from its $3 billion MultiChoice acquisition, while Telecel expands its Ghana network and BYD dominates Africa's EV market.

👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – Canal+ goes to the JSE

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The Big Picture
Canal+ lists on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange today, completing a key regulatory requirement from its $3 billion acquisition of MultiChoice, which delisted in December 2025. The secondary inward listing allows local investors to trade Canal+ shares without leaving South Africa, though no new shares are issued. Meanwhile, Telecel Ghana begins a nationwide network upgrade with Huawei, deploying over 100 base stations in Accra as part of a $70 million deal to challenge MTN's 73.9% market share. BYD now controls 35% of Africa's EV market, up from 4% in 2023, with sales surging to nearly 25,000 vehicles in 2025, driven by cheaper models and aggressive infrastructure plans in South Africa. Additionally, Concentrix commits $1 billion to expand in Egypt, creating 16,000 jobs, as the country's digital outsourcing exports nearly doubled to $5 billion.
Why It Matters
Canal+ listing on the JSE is a strategic move to anchor its African expansion after acquiring MultiChoice, but the real test is reversing subscriber losses amid inflation and streaming competition. This dual-listing structure could set a precedent for foreign firms seeking local investor buy-in while maintaining global primaries, reshaping how African markets participate in cross-border media consolidation.

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Companies

Canal+ goes live on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange today

South African investors getting ready. Image Source: Tenor

Before you make your coffee this morning, Canal+, the French streaming giant that bought pay-TV giant MultiChoice, would have listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE).

The listing is more than a ceremonial bell-ringing. It fulfils one of the final regulatory commitments Canal+ made as part of its $3 billion acquisition of MultiChoice, which delisted from the JSE after the deal closed in December 2025. As part of the transaction, the company committed to securing a secondary inward listing on the JSE, giving local investors a way to buy Canal+ shares without leaving South Africa’s market.

No new shares are being issued. Investors on the JSE will simply be able to trade Canal+ stock locally while the company keeps its primary listing in London.

State of play: The move is a reminder of why Canal+ pursued MultiChoice in the first place. Africa sits at the heart of the broadcaster’s growth ambitions, and the acquisition delivered access to more than 50 countries, millions of subscribers, premium sports rights, and one of the continent’s largest local content businesses.

Growth, however, is far from guaranteed. MultiChoice entered the deal after losing 1.2 million subscribers in 2025 as inflation, currency depreciation, and streaming competition squeezed household budgets across its markets.

Canal+ believes scale can help reverse that decline. The company has set aside $115 million for a turnaround plan and expects to generate significant cost savings by integrating the two businesses.

Zoom out: Today’s listing checks off a regulatory requirement. Winning back subscribers is the challenge investors will be watching next.

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Telecoms

Telecel is expanding network upgrade to compete with MTN in Ghana

Image Source: Andertoons

Ghana’s telecoms market has been a one-horse race for years; MTN Ghana controls 73.9% of the market with over 30 million subscribers. 

Telecel Ghana, which rebranded from Vodafone Ghana after Telecel Group’s 2023 acquisition, holds 18.3% with 7.29 million users. The state-owned telecom firm is ramping up plans to claw back market share from leader MTN Ghana.

One of the ways it is prioritising this is through infrastructure upgrades: In May, Telecel began a nationwide network upgrade push that kicked off in Madina, Accra. The company said it plans to deploy over 100 high-traffic base station sites across 1,000 locations in the city. The upgrade, part of a $70 million deal with Huawei from November 2025, will allow Telecel to build a stronger telecom presence in Madina, a densely populated suburb and one of the commercial centres in Ghana.

Telecel’s investment coincides with a challenger operator emerging. In Ghana, MTN has historically dominated the telecom market, but Telecel sees an opportunity on two fronts.

First, the telecom operator is in the process of merging with struggling AT Ghana, a move that would bring an additional 3.2 million subscribers into its fold and raise its market share to about 26%. Telecel already competes with MTN on data and telecom prices, but its limited network reach has long been a barrier to growth. 

If it can expand coverage into commercial centres with stronger revenue potential, it could become a more credible challenger to MTN in the coming years.

The opportunity is significant. Ghana is already MTN Group’s most profitable market, with subscribers consuming more data and voice than in many of its other operations. That suggests there is enough demand for Telecel to build a stronger case for itself. 

The ball’s in Telecel’s court. Success in suburbs like Madina will depend on execution. Competitive prices alone may not be enough; Telecel will need to extend reliable connectivity to the last mile if it hopes to convert network upgrades into meaningful market share gains.

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Mobility

BYD now controls 35% of Africa EV market, report says

Image Source: Dealerfloor

If you own a BYD electric vehicle (EV) in Africa, you’re one of the customers driving the Chinese company’s dominance in the continent’s electric vehicle market.

According to a report by the International Energy Agency (IEA), BYD’s share of Africa’s EV market surged from 4% in 2023 to 35% in 2025, showing how quickly the company has scaled across emerging markets.

Why is BYD growing this fast? While Africa’s EV market still has far lower uptake than petrol cars, BYD is attracting a growing base of loyal customers. In 2025, BYD car sales grew from 4,000 vehicles in 2023 to nearly 25,000 in 2025, with Egypt, Morocco and South Africa accounting for almost 70% of total demand.

State of play: Buying a brand new EV is not cheap, even for many African markets with slightly better disposable income. BYD has intentionally targeted that group by shipping cheaper EV models in markets like Egypt and South Africa, undercutting competitors like Maxus and Toyota, which recently introduced an EV in the market.

BYD’s expansion is also being backed by aggressive infrastructure plans in South Africa, the continent’s most developed auto market. In April, the company opened 32 new dealerships in the country, and plans to deploy between 200 and 300 fast-charging stations by the end of the year, positioning the country as a potential launchpad for wider African growth.

Between the lines: The broader trend points to a market that is still concentrated but becoming competitive, with Chinese automakers rapidly gaining ground as EV adoption begins to take hold in a handful of key economies.

Zoom out: For now, BYD’s dominance reflects scale and speed. Whether that advantage holds will depend on how quickly infrastructure, affordability, and policy support expand beyond a few urban centres.

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Companies

Global technology firm Concentrix is investing $1 billion to expand in Egypt

Image Source: Tenor

There’s a number that explains why global companies keep showing up in Cairo with large cheques: Egypt’s digital outsourcing exports nearly doubled from $2.4 billion in 2022 to $5 billion in 2025, while the number of multinational outsourcing companies operating in the country grew from 90 to over 240 in the same period. 

That performance is pulling in companies like Concentrix, a US-headquartered firm that manages customer experience, technology, and business operations for brands across financial services, healthcare, and tourism. 

On May 31, Concentrix leadership met with Raafat Hindi, the country’s Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Minister, to review the progress of its Egypt expansion put into motion in January 2025.

What Concentrix is doing: The company, which has operated in Egypt since 2009, signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Egypt’s Information Technology Industry Development Agency (ITIDA) to invest $1 billion over four years. The plan is to open five new regional centres, and create 16,000 jobs, taking its Egyptian workforce from 24,000 today to 35,000 by 2028. It is not alone. Konecta, Foundever, and Deloitte have all recently announced major Egypt expansions.

Why Egypt? Three things are driving this. First, a large, young, multilingual workforce, an ITIDA incentive framework built specifically for outsourcing companies, and a post-devaluation cost base that makes Egyptian labour competitive with India and Eastern Europe. 

Why it matters: The government wants digital exports to reach $9 billion by 2026 and $13 billion by 2030. For ordinary Egyptians, that ambition translates into jobs, 16,000 from Concentrix alone, in a country with a youth unemployment rate of 18.3% in 2025. Concentrix alone won’t close that gap, but 35,000 employees processing global transactions from Cairo is a meaningful piece of it.

CRYPTO TRACKER

The World Wide Web3

Source:

CoinMarketCap logo
CoinMarketCap logo

Coin Name

Current Value

Day

Month

Bitcoin $67,205

– 4.31%

– 15.96%

Ether $1,869

– 5.77%

– 21.18%

XRP $1.30

+ 2.16%

– 6.15%

Solana $81.77

+ 1.40%

– 3.63%

* Data as of 06.40 AM WAT, June 3, 2026.

Opportunities

  • The Stellar Development Foundation has launched its first accelerator programme targeting Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, partnering with blockchain venture firm CV Labs to back ten early-stage startups building payments infrastructure, tokenised assets, and decentralised finance applications. The 12-week programme, beginning August 2026, will run primarily remotely but includes an on-site component in Cape Town and concludes with a demo day at Stellar’s Meridian conference in Lisbon in October. Each selected startup can receive up to $150,000 in XLM, Stellar’s native token, in initial funding. Apply by July.
  • The Future Investment Initiative Institute (FII), in partnership with MIT Solve, has launched the 2026 FII Innovators Pitch, inviting startups building with AI and frontier technologies to apply. The programme targets solutions across sustainability, healthcare, AI & robotics, and education. Selected startups will pitch live at the 10th Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, this October (all expenses covered) and join the FII Ventures Programme, gaining access to investors, policymakers, and global partners to support their growth. Apply here.
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Written by: Emmanuel Nwosu and Zia Yusuf

Edited by: Emmanuel Nwosu and Ganiu Oloruntade

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