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Investing 101: 6 Smart Ways to Grow Your Money

Investing 101: 6 Smart Ways to Grow Your Money

Want to make your money work for you? Explore 6 types of investments every South African should know in this beginner-friendly guide. Learn more on SFI.COZA.

In a world where financial freedom is becoming less of a luxury and more of a necessity, knowing how to invest is no longer just for the rich. Whether you’re a recent graduate in Johannesburg, a young professional in Cape Town, or a hustler in Durban stacking multiple income streams, investing is the move. Today, SFI.COZA breaks down six simple types of investments that anyone, yes, anyone, can start exploring right now. No jargon. No fluff. Just real info to help you move forward.


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image by saxo bank

Stocks are shares of ownership in a company. When you buy a stock, youโ€™re buying a small piece of that business. If it grows, your piece becomes more valuable.

Theyโ€™re risky, but that risk can pay off. Many South Africans are tapping into the JSE or global markets via apps like EasyEquities. It’s easy and accessible, and with the right strategy, stocks can build long-term wealth.

“Investing should be more like watching paint dry or watching grass grow. If you want excitement, take R500 and go to the casino.” โ€” Paul Samuelson

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Image by Rustomjee

Property is one of Mzansi’s oldest flexes, from back rooms in Soweto to Airbnb units in Sea Point. When done right, buying property can give you both rental income and long-term appreciation.

The catch? It requires a lot of upfront money, and maintenance can be a hustle. But with platforms like REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts), even that is changing.

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These are like buying a box of mixed sweets. Instead of picking one stock, you get a whole group of them. ETFs and unit trusts are managed either by professionals or algorithms and are perfect for people who want to “set it and forget it.”

Theyโ€™re low-cost, low-stress, and great for beginners who want to invest without doing all the research themselves.

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Bonds are like loans you give to companies or the government, and in return, they pay you interest. Theyโ€™re usually lower risk than stocks and perfect for folks looking for stability and a predictable income stream.

Treasury bonds from the South African government are a popular option, safe, reliable, and steady, just like that uncle who always shows up early to the braai.

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Bitcoin. Ethereum. Solana. These digital currencies are shaking the table globally, and South Africans are paying attention.

Crypto is high risk and super volatile, but the potential returns are massive. Just donโ€™t throw your rent money at it. Start small, learn as you go, and only invest what youโ€™re willing to lose. Platforms like VALR and Luno make it simple for locals to start stacking sats.

The best investment? Still you. Courses, workshops, degrees, or certifications, levelling up your skills can bring better jobs, side hustles, or business success.

In an economy where opportunities are scarce, being resourceful and upskilling can often outpace traditional investments in terms of returns.


  • Always do your research. Don’t follow TikTok trends blindly.
  • Start with what you understand.
  • Donโ€™t invest money youโ€™ll need soon (like next monthโ€™s rent).
  • Diversify, never keep all your money in one type of investment.

Whether itโ€™s crypto or career growth, real estate or retail shares, the goal is the same: let your money grow. Investing doesnโ€™t have to be complex or intimidating. Itโ€™s about starting small, staying consistent, and thinking long-term.

As the SFI.COZA founder, Thembinkosi Zuma always says, โ€œIf you want to chill tomorrow, you gotta build today.โ€

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Adulting Season 3 – Cast, Plot & Full Guide

Adulting Season 3 - Cast, Plot & Full Guide

Is There Life After Bonga’s Mistakes? Adulting Season 3 Answers That and More

Will South Africa ever stop talking about adulting? Not likely. The 3rd season of the Showmax Original drama returned on 25 January 2025, bringing even more heat, heartbreak, and hard conversations. Set against the vibrant yet unforgiving backdrop of modern Johannesburg, Adulting Season 3 continues to explore the highs and lows of four men trying to make sense of love, fatherhood, money, friendship, and masculinity in todayโ€™s South Africa.

The show follows Bonga, Mpho, Eric, and Vuyani, four friends who grew up together and now find themselves navigating very different adult lives. Season 3 wastes no time diving into the chaos. Bonga is back in the hot seat as his marriage to Nkanyezi begins to unravel, Mpho battles with fatherhood and loneliness, Vuyani opens a new club while suppressing personal demons, and Eric gets deeper into danger.

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Images coutesy by Showmax

Each episode of Adulting is a mirror, reflecting society back at us. In Episode 1, titled “What A Time,” Bonga and Nkanyezi host a housewarming, but happiness is short-lived. By Episode 8, titled “Live Life With No Regrets,” that same marriage is done, Eric is backsliding into his worst habits, and Mpho is chasing love in all the wrong places.

South African audiences have always been drawn to raw storytelling, but this season leans even further into uncomfortable truths. Whether itโ€™s divorce, masculinity, or economic stress, Season 3 isn’t here to sugarcoat reality. It’s real. It’s messy. And that’s why people are hooked.

Thembinkosi Mthembu shines once again as Bonga, capturing the duality of a man who loves his family but keeps betraying them. Nhlanhla Kunene as Eric brings intensity and vulnerability to a role that forces audiences to question loyalty, trauma, and survival.

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Images coutesy by Showmax

Joining the main cast are standout performances from Londeka Sishi (Nkanyezi), Dippy Padi (Palesa), and Samkelo Ndlovu (Minki). New and familiar faces like Zenokuhle Maseko, Winnie Ntshaba, and Thembi Seete bring even more depth to this growing universe of interconnected relationships.

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Images coutesy by Showmax

What makes Adulting so important isnโ€™t just its entertainment value. It’s the way it uses fiction to spark national conversations. Are South African men emotionally equipped to be partners and fathers? Can Black love survive financial instability? Is forgiveness ever enough when trust is broken?

Episode 10, titled “Are We Victims of Women?” stirs controversy and introspection. Mpho’s messy love life, Eric’s toxic choices, and Bonga’s infidelity force the audience to ask tough questions about gender roles and expectations.

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Images coutesy by Showmax

By setting the series in Johannesburg, a city where tradition and modernity collide, Adulting positions itself at the cultural heart of post-apartheid masculinity. And with each character representing a different aspect of that reality, the show becomes less about escapism and more about education.

The Real Star? The Writing.

What sets Adulting apart from other local series is its writing. Each scene has weight. Dialogue feels like it was lifted from your cousin’s WhatsApp group. Conflict isnโ€™t exaggerated; itโ€™s recognizable. The pacing is sharp. By Episode 12, aptly titled “Too Short, Too Soon,” tensions explode. Secrets come out. Betrayals are revealed. And fists are thrown.

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Itโ€™s not just drama for drama’s sake. Each plotline moves the story forward while staying grounded in a real-world South African context.

Adulting Season 3 is available now on Showmax, with new episodes dropping weekly. If you’re new to the show, it’s worth bingeing Seasons 1 and 2 to truly appreciate the evolution of each character. The layered performances and emotional payoffs only hit harder when you’ve seen how far theyโ€™ve come.

Whether you’re watching for the drama, the brotherhood, or the bold take on Black South African adulthood, one thing is certain: this season proves Adulting isnโ€™t just a show; itโ€™s a cultural moment.

As Bonga says in Episode 11, โ€œWe come from the streets, but we still want peace.โ€

And thatโ€™s what Adulting really shows us: the war between where we come from and who we want to become.

Adulting Season 3: It’s not just TV. It’s therapy.

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