
Smal
7.7K posts



I’ve been creating this list of Zim companies that record 100 million dollars or more in annual turnover. I thought I could compile the list myself, but it’s taking me forever… and unfortunately A.I. can’t help either. Who did I leave out? NB: This is not the final list. Category 1 – USD reported numbers 1.Delta Corporation – 807m dollars (FY25) 2.Innscor Africa – 1.086b dollars (FY25) 3.Zimplats – 826.6m dollars (FY25) 4.Simbisa Brands – 307m dollars (FY25) 5.Axia Corporation – 196m dollars (FY25) 6.Padenga Holdings – 266m dollars (FY25) 7.Old Mutual Zimbabwe – 194m dollars (FY25) 8.First Mutual Holdings – 177m dollars (FY25) 9.Dairiboard Holdings – 137.5m dollars 10.Hippo Valley – 192m dollars (FY25) 11.Caledonia Mining – 268m dollars (FY25) 12.SeedCo International – 124m dollars (FY25) 13.Kuvimba Mining House – 297m dollars (FY25) 14.National Foods – 359m dollars (FY24) Category 2 – ZiG numbers that should be converted to USD 15.CBZ Holdings – 220m (FY25) 16.Stanbic Bank – 180m dollars (FY25) 17.Econet Wireless – 740m (FY25) 18.NMB Holdings 19.ZB Holdings 20.OK Zimbabwe – 245m dollars (FY25) 21.Meikles Limited – 480m dollars (FY25) 22.Ecobank – 138m dollars (FY25) Category 3 – Subsidiaries of international listed companies 23.Varun Beverage – 179m dollars 24.Unki Mine (from parent company annual report)




This morning, tobacco farmers staged a protest and stopped selling their tobacco because of the very low prices being offered. As shown in the pictures, one farmer was offered only $0.40 to $0.50 per kilogram for their tobacco bales. This is much lower than previous seasons, where the same grade of tobacco sold for around $5 per kilogram. Farmers say these prices are too low and do not cover the cost of production. Because of this, some farmers have paused their sales and are calling for fair prices and more transparency in how prices are set. 📸 @cde_simba










HE President @CyrilRamaphosa earlier today, undertook a working visit to the Republic of Zimbabwe for an engagement with his Zimbabwean counterpart, HE President Emmerson Mnangangwa, to discuss issues of mutual and bilateral interests. South Africa and Zimbabwe maintain a historical, political and dynamic trade relationship. In 2025, South African exports to Zimbabwe totaled about U$ 4.30 billion, with agricultural products and machinery dominating the majority of traded goods. #BetterAfricaBetterWorld 🌍









Actually ZIMSEC is tougher than Cambridge. The only difference is that those who sit for Cambridge Exams stand a better chance on enrolling into British institutions. That has been the motive, by and large, thus ensuring the colonial conveyor belt remains loaded as more and more Zimbabwean students trek abroad to swell the diaspora community!!!!




@AlexanderRusero Instead of focusing on free education for all, all we get is this, haiii these politicians seem to be high on something, making zimsec mandatory is not honna help a child from Dotito or Zaka to afford school fees, focus on what matters not these rushed decisions.













