• DO YOU NEED
    SHARE TRADING SOFTWARE AND EDUCATION
    Our software products are extremely user-friendly, perfect for both the beginner in the market, as well as the professional investor

Affordable, Efficient and Reliable Share Market Technical Analysis Software Everything you need to successfully invest on the stock market

About Progress Data Services

PDSNET (Progress Data Services) specialises in the development and sale of local as well as internationally acclaimed share trading investment software and education.

Over the last 35 years, we have become the largest local provider of stock market data, providing data of all equities quoted on the JSE (Johannesburg Stock Exchange), Futures, Unit Trusts, Currencies and Commodities as well as many of the major International Indices.


Our mission is to provide accurate and reliable JSE data to all our customers. As well as this, we aim to sell only the best technical analysis products on the market, and pride ourselves in supplying value for money.

FOUR IMPORTANT CRITERIA WHEN CHOOSING TECHNICAL ANALYSIS SOFTWARE

A competent investor will tell you there are four basic criteria when choosing technical analysis software. We are proud to say that our software easily satisfies these, is sold ethically and is good value for money.



"Whenever I have a problem I can phone PDSnet for help. They go out of their way to assist me, be it on Teamviewer or sending someone to my office. I firmly believe that one of the reasons for their success is that they provide full support and a download service in MetaStock format plus providing the client with knowledgeable trained technical support staff. Their software program, ShareFriend Pro, is also commendable and must rank as one of the most user-friendly and easiest to use charting software available on the local market."

Christo AuretHead Finance WITS University

"Throughout my years as a financial journalist, writing on stock market investment for The Citizen, The Star, The Business Day and The Financial Mail, I have mostly relied upon ShareFriend Executive and ShareFriend Pro to identify the shares most likely to gain, or those in danger of losing ground. I am able to pick which sectors should be highlighted, those that should be left alone; when gold or oil are likely to change direction. The data necessary to compile my charts is provided by PDS Data Centre. Having now retired from journalism but still running several portfolios of shares, a daily download is all I need, but could choose more frequent downloads if I wished. With the holdings in my various portfolios automatically updated, taking split-second action at exactly the right time is child’s play."

Jean Temkin's books

Jean TemkinFinancial Journalist and Author

PDSnet | Articles

Sasol

12 February 2024 By PDSNET

Sasol is a company originally established in September 1950 by the National Party, to counter the possibility of petrochemical sanctions against the old South Africa. Essentially, Sasol used South Africa’s enormous coal reserves to generate about one third of its fuel requirements. Subsequently, Sasol became involved in the chemical industry which now accounts for about half of its business.

Sasol is a massive company with an annual turnover of R289,6bn in the year to 30th June 2023. Its performance is a direct function of the oil price and the basket of chemicals it produces. It is a price taker and not a price maker. However, it is mostly very profitable, generating huge quantities of cash from the various businesses that it engages in.

As an investment, it is volatile and that volatility has resulted in it having a very low price:earnings ratio (P:E) and a very high dividend yield (DY) – which is obviously attractive to private investors. Right now it is trading on a P:E of 2,73 and a DY of 9,28% which compares with the JSE’s average P:E of 10, 46 and DY of 4,25%.

In its recent trading statement for the six months to 31st December 2023, the company estimated that headline earnings per share (HEPS) would come in at between R17.90 and R22.20 which is considerably lower than the HEPS for 2022 of R30,90 – but still amounts to a solid profit.

The decline in profitability is due to the drop in oil and chemical prices worldwide. Sasol has clearly gone right out of fashion as an institutional investment. Fund managers have been off-loading the share steadily for the past 19 months and the share price has been in a downward trend as a result.

But this is a massive company which is very profitable. It is not going into liquidation – and therefore at some point its share price must turn and start to go up. The oil and petrochemicals prices will not fall forever.

As a private investor, you need to use your best endeavours to determine exactly when that moment will arrive. Consider the chart:

Sasol (SOL): May 2022 - 9 February 2023. Chart by ShareFriend Pro.

The chart shows Sasol’s cyclical high at R430.42 made on 6th June 2022 – just 19 months ago. Since then, the share has off-loaded almost two-thirds of its value and closed last Friday at R146.55. It cannot fall indefinitely. At some point sentiment will turn and the share will again be perceived as “cheap” by the fund managers. When that happens, they will begin buying it again and the share price will rise giving you the opportunity to make a capital gain.

So, your problem, as a private investor, is to try to determine exactly when it reaches its lowest point. The danger, of course, is that the share will fall further after you have bought in. To counter that possibility, you need to have a strict stop-loss strategy that limits your loss to not more than 10% if you get it wrong – bearing in mind that, with a volatile share like Sasol, you could see your money triple or better if you get it right.

There are many methods for determining when a share has turned. They range from the conservative, like waiting for it to break up through its downward trendline, to using a 21-day simple moving average and waiting for an upside break. In general, the more conservative your approach, the later you will get into the new upward trend when it arrives, but the more secure you will be when you do.

On the chart above, the earliest signal will come when the share price breaks up through the 21-day simple moving average (red). The next signal, coming somewhat later, when it crosses the 65-day exponentially smoothed moving average (black) and then finally the most conservative will be when it crosses the 200-day moving average (blue) and the medium term downward trendline. As always in the share market, you will trade off profit for security.

But you should remember that at whatever moment you decide to take the plunge and buy the share, you will be doing a whole lot better than those institutional fund managers who filled their pockets with Sasol shares back in June 2022 at a price of R430 per share.


DISCLAIMER

All information and data contained within the PDSnet Articles is for informational purposes only. PDSnet makes no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, suitability, or validity, of any information, and shall not be liable for any errors, omissions, or any losses, injuries, or damages arising from its display or use. Information in the PDSnet Articles are based on the author’s opinion and experience and should not be considered professional financial investment advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional. Thoughts and opinions will also change from time to time as more information is accumulated. PDSnet reserves the right to delete any comment or opinion for any reason.



Share this article:

PDSNET ARTICLES

The Debtors' Book

A BIT OF HISTORY

Many years ago, in 1982 when I started this business (which became “PDSnet”), I ran advertisements in both the Rand Daily Mail (RDM) and in the Star – which were the two most widely read newspapers in Johannesburg at the time. At that time, we were a very small business and had no credit rating at all. Despite this the RDM immediately

WeBuyCars - Results

The financial results of companies show how profitable they are and give a good indication of their share’s risk and potential return. WeBuyCars (WBC) is a recent listing which came to the JSE on the 11th of April 2024. Unlike other listed motor vehicle companies, it is a company which specialises in the purchase and sale

Choosing Winners

We are often asked how we go about selecting the shares to put on to the Winning Shares List (WSL). Right now, there are 102 shares on the list with 5 having gone down since they were added, 94 are up and 3 are unchanged. On an annualised basis, 24 of them are performing at above 100% per annum.   

As a private investor,

Kore Revisited

Kore (KP2) remains at once the most exciting and most risky investment on our Winning Shares List (WSL) at the moment. We originally added it to the list just over a year ago on 16th May 2024 at a price of 20c. It subsequently rose to a high of 83c on 3rd October 2024 and we published an article

Rand Strength 2025

The strength of the rand is both a critical and a complex issue for private investors on the JSE. Our currency is influenced by two primary forces:

  1. Our local economy’s prospects
  2. The rand’s role as a leading emerging market currency

These, in turn, are

Sibanye Revisited

In these uncertain times, when nobody really knows to what extent Trump will back down on the international trade war which he has initiated, many investors are moving into precious metals as a hedge against the weakness of paper currencies (especially the US dollar) and paper assets like equities and bonds.

The problem

Smart Local Investors

The last two months have been wild on the markets – mainly because of Trump’s ill-advised, on-again, off-again tariff policies. The issue now is:

Will this morph into a full-blown bear trend? Or is this correction almost over?

From his election victory on the 6th of November 2024,

Jerome Powell

The Federal Reserve Bank (“the Fed”) is completely outside the control of the President and Executive Branch of the US government. The chairman of the Fed is appointed for a renewable 4-year term by the President. The President cannot remove the Chair without cause. The current chairman, Jerome Powell was appointed by Trump during his first term as President and reappointed by

Uncertainty Soars

Investors are by their very nature risk takers, but they are always trying to reduce the risk which they have to take to a minimum. Donald Trump, with his threat of an international trade war and his on-again, off-again tariffs has significantly increased the level of risk in markets across the world. This can be seen in the extraordinary volatility in the S&P500

Liberation Day

Trump has done the unthinkable. He has deliberately engineered the collapse of the US and world stock markets in the nonsensical belief that somehow an international trade war will make Americans richer. Nothing could be further from the truth. His actions have taken the S&P down from its all-time record high of 6144.15 on 19th February 2025 to Friday’s