Patrice Motsepe Net Worth 2026:
Africa’s First Black Billionaire
Who Is Patrice Motsepe?
Patrice Tlhopane Motsepe (born 28 January 1962, Soweto) is a South African billionaire businessman, mining magnate, and the president of the Confederation of African Football (CAF). He is the founder and Non-executive Chairman of African Rainbow Minerals (ARM) β one of South Africa’s most diversified and profitable mining companies β and holds major stakes in financial services, digital banking, and sport.
In 2008, he made history as the first Black African to appear on Forbes’ global billionaires list, a milestone that cemented his role as one of the most important figures in post-apartheid South Africa’s economy. His story begins not in a boardroom, but in his father’s spaza shop in the mining belt β watching mine workers spend their wages β a first-hand education in enterprise that shaped everything that followed.
Motsepe built his fortune the hard way: by acquiring so-called “marginal” gold mines that major players like Anglo American had written off as unprofitable. By applying lean management β combining low base wages with production profit-sharing bonuses β he turned these overlooked shafts into cash-generating assets. That disciplined model of turning opportunity from failure is the foundation of a wealth story that now spans mining, fintech, real estate, and African football governance.
“I didn’t choose mining because it was glamorous β I chose it because the opportunity was there, hiding in plain sight where others only saw losses.”
Beyond mining, Motsepe is widely known as the owner of Mamelodi Sundowns FC, the most decorated club in South African football history. He is also a key figure in the ANC’s political orbit β his sister Tshepo is married to President Cyril Ramaphosa, and his other sister Bridgette Radebe is a prominent businesswoman in the mining industry. In early 2026, Motsepe stepped down as Executive Chairman of ARM (in line with new JSE listing requirements) and transitioned to the role of Non-executive Chairman.
Patrice Motsepe Net Worth in 2026: Updated Figures
As of early 2026, Patrice Motsepe’s net worth reached a new peak of approximately $4.3 billion USD, according to Forbes estimates reported in January 2026. This surge was driven by a sharp rise in gold prices (which topped $5,100 per ounce) and corresponding gains in ARM and Harmony Gold share prices. His fortune had started the year at $3.7 billion and climbed by $600 million in a matter of weeks.
At an exchange rate of approximately R18.47 to the dollar, that translates to roughly R79 billion ZAR β making him one of the wealthiest individuals ever produced by the South African mining sector.
His wealth grew by $600 million in the first month of 2026 alone, driven by surging gold prices and ARM share gains of over 27% year-to-date.
It is important to note that Motsepe’s wealth is highly sensitive to commodity prices and the JSE performance of ARM and Harmony Gold. These figures fluctuate daily. His wealth ranking in South Africa currently sits at third, behind Nicky Oppenheimer (~$10.6B) and Johann Rupert (~$15.3B) according to Forbes data from early 2026. Globally, he ranks in the top 1,000 wealthiest individuals β a milestone he crossed for the first time in January 2026 at position 993.
His wealth journey over recent years tells a compelling growth story:
| Year | Forbes Net Worth (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | $1.4 Billion | COVID-19 commodity downturn |
| 2021 | $2.9 Billion | Commodity supercycle recovery |
| 2022 | $3.3 Billion | Gold & platinum rally |
| 2024 | $2.9 Billion | Ranked 1,175th globally (Forbes) |
| 2025 | $3.7 Billion | +$700M growth over the year |
| 2026 (Peak) | $4.3 Billion | Gold above $5,100/oz β Forbes, Jan 2026 |
Primary Wealth Sources
Motsepe’s fortune is distributed across several major pillars, with mining remaining the dominant engine. Here is a breakdown of his key assets based on available 2026 data:
| Asset / Business | Estimated Value (USD) | Category |
|---|---|---|
| African Rainbow Minerals (ARM) β 45.9% stake | ~$1.53 Billion | Mining |
| Harmony Gold β indirect 11.8% stake via ARM | ~$1.83 Billion | Gold Mining |
| Tyme Group β ~40% indirect stake via ARC | ~$600 Million | Fintech |
| African Rainbow Capital (ARC) β other holdings | ~$200 Million | Investment |
| Sanlam Stake (via Ubuntu-Botho Investments) | ~$100 Million | Financial Services |
| Mamelodi Sundowns FC & Blue Bulls (37% stake) | ~$100 Million | Sport |
Two figures dominate the picture: his direct 45.9% stake in ARM (worth ~$1.53B) and his indirect 11.8% interest in Harmony Gold β South Africa’s largest gold producer β held through ARM’s historic merger with Avmin in 2003. Together these two mining holdings account for approximately $3.36 billion of his total fortune, meaning gold is the bedrock of his wealth. When gold prices rise, so does Motsepe’s net worth β and 2025/2026 has been a golden period.
His third-largest holding is now the Tyme Group, a Singapore-headquartered digital banking firm that operates GoTyme Bank in the Philippines and TymeBank in South Africa. After Tyme’s $250 million Series D funding round (led by Nubank in late 2024) valued the company at $1.5 billion, Motsepe’s indirect ~40% stake through African Rainbow Capital is estimated at around $600 million β making it the biggest fintech bet in his portfolio.
The Business Empire
Motsepe’s empire is a carefully constructed conglomerate spanning natural resources, financial services, digital technology, and sport. Here is a deeper look at the key components active in 2026:
African Rainbow Minerals (ARM)
ARM is the engine of Motsepe’s wealth. Listed on the JSE (ticker: ARI), it is a diversified mining company with operations in platinum group metals, nickel, chrome, iron ore, manganese, coal, and copper. Motsepe owns 45.9% of the company β approximately 103 million shares. ARM shares surged more than 27% in early 2026, lifting its market capitalisation to over R53 billion. In February 2026, Motsepe stepped down as Executive Chairman in compliance with the JSE Simplification Project’s new listing requirements, transitioning to Non-executive Chairman while remaining on the ARM board. ARM is also the vehicle through which he holds his indirect stake in Harmony Gold, South Africa’s largest gold producer. In early 2026, ARM signed a nickel off-take deal with Sweden’s Boliden to restart the mothballed Nkomati mine β a signal of ARM’s ambitions in battery minerals.
African Rainbow Capital (ARC)
Launched in 2016 as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ubuntu-Botho Investments (UBI), ARC is Motsepe’s diversified investment vehicle for financial services, fintech, and infrastructure in Africa. It holds stakes in more than 40 companies, including GoTyme Bank (Philippines), TymeBank (South Africa), Rain (SA’s 5G-only network), OUTsurance, Lesaka Technologies (NASDAQ-listed), and agricultural firm BKB. ARC also backed Lesaka’s R1.59 billion acquisition of payment processor Adumo in 2026. Motsepe’s bet on fintech is paying off: Tyme Group β backed through ARC β is now Africa’s ninth unicorn, valued at $1.5 billion after raising $250 million from Nubank in late 2024.
Ubuntu-Botho Investments & Sanlam
In 2003, Motsepe created Ubuntu-Botho Investments (UBI). In 2004, UBI entered into a landmark BEE deal with Sanlam, one of South Africa’s largest financial services groups. After the debt was repaid in 2014, UBI acquired 13.5% of Sanlam outright and now holds an 18.1% voting stake as Sanlam’s BEE partner. Johan van Zyl, former Sanlam executive, serves as ARC’s joint chief executive.
Mamelodi Sundowns FC
Motsepe acquired a 51% interest in Mamelodi Sundowns in 2003 for a reported R12 million, and gained full control in 2004. Under his ownership, Sundowns has become the most successful club in South African football history, winning the DStv Premiership for eight consecutive seasons from 2018 to 2025 and claiming the CAF Champions League title in 2016. His son Tlhopie Motsepe now serves as club chairman following Patrice’s election as CAF President. The club’s estimated value has grown more than 100 times since acquisition. Motsepe also owns a 37% stake in the Blue Bulls, South Africa’s premier rugby union franchise.
CAF Presidency
Patrice Motsepe was elected President of the Confederation of African Football (CAF) in March 2021 and was re-elected unopposed in March 2025 for a second term. Under his presidency, CAF has pursued greater commercial partnerships and structural reform within African football. His dual role as CAF President and one of Africa’s wealthiest mining magnates makes him one of the most influential figures on the continent.
Real Estate & Private Assets
Motsepe owns a Cape Town mansion estimated at R69 million and prime land in the Cape Peninsula worth approximately R30 million. His personal fleet includes a Hawker 4000 private jet and several luxury vehicles including a Bentley Continental GT and Mercedes-Benz S65 AMG.
Rise to Billionaire: Timeline
From spaza shop to CAF President β here are the defining milestones in Patrice Motsepe’s journey:
Annual Salary & Earnings
Motsepe’s “salary” in the traditional sense is a fraction of his total annual wealth generation. His primary income comes from dividends and capital appreciation β not a monthly paycheck. Here is a breakdown based on publicly available information and estimates:
| Income Stream | Estimated Annual (ZAR) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ARM Dividends (45.9% stake) | R1.0+ Billion | ARM paid R1.01 billion total interim dividend in April 2026; Motsepe pocketed ~$25.4 million (~R469M) from that single payout |
| ARC / UBI Distributions | R200β400 Million | Via African Rainbow Capital portfolio |
| Executive / Director Remuneration | R40β50 Million | Board fees from ARM and other directorships |
| Sanlam & Other Equity Income | R80β120 Million | Dividends and distributions |
| Total Estimated | R1.3β1.6 Billion+ | Excluding capital gains on share price appreciation |
Note: The headline “salary” figures circulated online (such as claims of R700 billion annually) are wildly inaccurate and appear to confuse his net worth figure with annual income. Motsepe’s actual annual cash income from dividends and fees is estimated in the R1β1.6 billion range β still an extraordinary sum, but a fraction of figures often cited.
Philanthropy & the Giving Pledge
In 2013, Patrice and Dr Precious Moloi-Motsepe became the first African couple to sign the Giving Pledge β the commitment initiated by Warren Buffett and Bill & Melinda Gates encouraging the world’s wealthiest individuals to donate the majority of their wealth to philanthropy. This was not just a symbolic gesture: the Motsepes have since deployed billions of rand through structured charitable work.
Their charitable vehicle, the Motsepe Foundation, focuses on four core areas: education, rural development, women’s empowerment, and small enterprise development in South Africa. The Foundation committed a R1 billion pledge toward COVID-19 relief in 2020, making it one of the largest private donations in South African history during that crisis.
Dr Precious Moloi-Motsepe is herself a prominent figure β a physician, entrepreneur, and champion of women’s health and fashion entrepreneurship in Africa. The couple has three children and together represent one of the most influential philanthropic partnerships on the continent.
“We want to ensure that the wealth we’ve been privileged to accumulate is used for the good of all South Africans β particularly the poor and marginalised.”
Motsepe has also donated to the Nelson Mandela Foundation, the World Economic Forum’s Board of Trustees (where he serves as a member), and various church and community development initiatives across South Africa’s mining regions. His philanthropy is inseparable from his business philosophy: both are rooted in the idea that South Africa’s resources should uplift its people.