• Bakgatla isolated, furiousJune 17, 2026
    Kgosi Kgafela II’s SA power struggle steals their peace Bakgatla ba- Kgafela feel neglected by the Govt of Botswana ‘We will fight our own to protect Kgosi Kgafela II’- Kgosi Sekai BAKANG TIRO editors@thepatriot.co.bw RelatedPosts Bakgatla isolated, furious Motshegwa… Read more: Bakgatla isolated, furious
  • Motshegwa backtracksJune 15, 2026
    Lifts suspension of Palapye Council, reinstates ousted Chairman Experts doubt minister’s powers to suspend council session ‘Local Government Act only refers to dissolution of council’ – expert STAFF WRITER editors@thepatriot.co.bw RelatedPosts Bakgatla isolated, furious Motshegwa backtracks CRISIS COUNTRY! Support… Read more: Motshegwa backtracks
  • Mmelesi gives wings to FirstCredJune 15, 2026
    Microfinance trailblazer Fred Mmelesi has resurfaced at FirstCred as its new CEO and shareholder. His message is simple: watch the space! Writes STAFF WRITER Ambition and purpose have landed Fred Mmelesi to a new quest. RelatedPosts Mmelesi gives wings… Read more: Mmelesi gives wings to FirstCred
  • CRISIS COUNTRY!June 15, 2026
    Botswana faces healthcare collapse, rising debt, diamond sales slump Multiple shocks strain the economy, with the cost of living escalating Retrenchments loom large as companies struggle BAKWADI LEKOPANE editors@thepatriot.co.bw RelatedPosts Bakgatla isolated, furious Motshegwa backtracks CRISIS COUNTRY! Support authors… Read more: CRISIS COUNTRY!
  • Former VP rebrands ahead of BDP’s 2027 congress Tsogwane’s charm offensiveJune 12, 2026
    His latest character appealing to Boko and BDP members Boko calls him Sdala, enjoying his company at state events Some BDP members pursue Tsogwane to lead the party Tsogwane tactically positioned himself in UDC Govt – Analyst BAKANG TIRO… Read more: Former VP rebrands ahead of BDP’s 2027 congress Tsogwane’s charm offensive
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders
  • Login
  • Register
Friday, June 19, 2026
The Patriot On Sunday
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders
No Result
View All Result
Cart / $0.00

No products in the cart.

  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders
No Result
View All Result
The Patriot On Sunday
No Result
View All Result

BEYOND DISCLOSURE: RETHINKING HOW LISTED COMPANIES ENGAGE THE MARKET

Gorataone Kgosimore by Gorataone Kgosimore
May 28, 2026
in Business
0

RelatedPosts

Mmelesi gives wings to FirstCred

Botswana turns to UAE, Oman in De Beers power play

Gambling Authority drives the responsible gaming revolution

By Rorisang Modikana, Acting Chief Executive Officer, Letlole La Rona Limited

Disclosure and communication serve different purposes; and the distinction may matter more than we think. Since taking on the role of Acting CEO at Letlole La Rona, I have found myself returning to a question that is perhaps less operational than it is relational: how does a listed company engage the market in a way that is genuinely useful to those who follow it?

The strategic foundations at LLR are clear, and the team has both continuity and experience. But the question of how a company communicates (not just what it reports) is one I think is worth reflecting on more openly, particularly during a period of leadership transition.

Listed companies, ourselves at LLR included, invest significant effort in meeting disclosure requirements. Reports are filed, results are published, and regulatory obligations are met. And yet there is often a sense (one I do not think is unique to LLR) that the information available to the market does not always translate into a shared understanding of where a company is going and why.

I am not sure the answer lies in more disclosure alone. It may lie in a different quality of conversation, and it is one we continue to reflect on from both a governance and best practice perspective.

The investors and analysts who follow listed property companies bring considerable knowledge to the table; this is without doubt. What is often most valuable to these stakeholders is context: understanding what the numbers mean in the specific environment a company operates in, what strategic choices have been made and why, and what the risks and opportunities ahead actually look like. Indeed, it helps them hold us to account. That kind of contextual engagement, however, is harder to achieve through reporting cycles alone.

For LLR, context is particularly important. We operate in Botswana’s formal property market, which is still developing as an institutional asset class. We have been listed on the BSE since 2011 and our portfolio spans retail and industrial assets across Botswana inGaborone, Lobatse, Mahalapye and Francistown. Like many companies in growing markets, we are conscious that our results are best understood alongside a clear picture of the market conditions and strategic decisions behind them; not in isolation from them.

Good investor engagement, in our experience, is proactive rather than reactive. It does not wait for results season to explain context that has been building for months. It anticipates the questions that informed observers are likely to ask, and it addresses them honestly, including where the answers are uncertain or where the picture is more complex than a headline number suggests. We are not perfect at this, but put in the work to improve. Why? Because it matters. It is crucial to how – and this is our belief – to improving something that is perhaps underappreciated in how listed companies think about communication: that engagement is most valuable when it is genuinely two-directional. Investor and analyst questions (the hard ones in particular) are not a threat to be managed. They are a source of discipline. They surface assumptions that management may have stopped questioning. They reflect how the company is being read from the outside, which is not always the same as how it understands itself from within. It is about holding ourselves and each other to account for the ultimate benefit of the shareholder and stakeholder.

Consistency matters too. Trust between a listed company and its investors is not built in a single interaction or a particularly well-received results presentation. It accumulates over time, through a pattern of communication that is reliable, clear, and honest about both progress and setbacks. Companies that communicate well only when results are strong tend to find that the market discounts their narrative accordingly.

For companies operating in developing markets, there is an additional layer to this. The investment case for a market like Botswana is not yet widely understood by all segments of institutional capital, and building that understanding is a long-term endeavour. It requires patience, a willingness to explain structural dynamics that may be unfamiliar, and an honest acknowledgement of the constraints alongside the opportunities. This is not a communications challenge that can be resolved in a single roadshow or annual report.

Increasingly, regulators and governance frameworks are recognisingthis. The trend across African exchanges is toward stronger expectations around stakeholder engagement, not merely disclosure compliance. The direction of travel is clear: listed companies are expected to communicate, not just report. How individual companies respond to that expectation will, over time, become a meaningful part of how they are assessed.

I am mindful that writing this as an acting CEO carries its own context. Leadership transitions are moments when the market reasonably asks questions about continuity and direction. My answer to those questions is straightforward: the strategy at LLR is intact, the team is stable, and our collective role is to continue building on the foundations that are already in place. But I also think transitions can be useful moments for reflection; an opportunity to ask not just what we are doing, but how we are doing it, and whether there are areas where we can do it better.

Investor engagement is one of those areas for us. We welcome the opportunity to engage directly; to discuss the portfolio, the market, and the questions that matter to those who follow us. This piece is offered in that spirit: as an opening to a more ongoing and substantive conversation and a commitment to keep learning and keep engaging. Always.

Tags: Botswana Stock Exchange (BSE)InvetsmentListed companies
Previous Post

Mohwasa woos Phikwe East

Next Post

P395m for UB retrenchment

Related Posts

Mmelesi gives wings to FirstCred
Business

Mmelesi gives wings to FirstCred

June 15, 2026
Botswana turns to UAE, Oman in De Beers power play
Business

Botswana turns to UAE, Oman in De Beers power play

June 11, 2026
Gambling Authority drives the responsible gaming revolution
Business

Gambling Authority drives the responsible gaming revolution

June 11, 2026
P3.4 billion: SPEDU’s investment value
Business

P3.4 billion: SPEDU’s investment value

June 2, 2026
BTC Business engages the Finance and Banking Sector
Business

BTC Business engages the Finance and Banking Sector

May 29, 2026
Botswana’s unsettling debacle  Poverty amidst mineral wealth
Business

Botswana’s unsettling debacle Poverty amidst mineral wealth

May 25, 2026
Next Post
P395m for UB retrenchment

P395m for UB retrenchment

  • Bakgatla isolated, furiousJune 17, 2026
    Kgosi Kgafela II’s SA power struggle steals their peace Bakgatla ba- Kgafela feel neglected by the Govt of Botswana ‘We will fight our own to protect Kgosi Kgafela II’- Kgosi Sekai BAKANG TIRO editors@thepatriot.co.bw RelatedPosts Bakgatla isolated, furious Motshegwa… Read more: Bakgatla isolated, furious
  • Motshegwa backtracksJune 15, 2026
    Lifts suspension of Palapye Council, reinstates ousted Chairman Experts doubt minister’s powers to suspend council session ‘Local Government Act only refers to dissolution of council’ – expert STAFF WRITER editors@thepatriot.co.bw RelatedPosts Bakgatla isolated, furious Motshegwa backtracks CRISIS COUNTRY! Support… Read more: Motshegwa backtracks
  • Mmelesi gives wings to FirstCredJune 15, 2026
    Microfinance trailblazer Fred Mmelesi has resurfaced at FirstCred as its new CEO and shareholder. His message is simple: watch the space! Writes STAFF WRITER Ambition and purpose have landed Fred Mmelesi to a new quest. RelatedPosts Mmelesi gives wings… Read more: Mmelesi gives wings to FirstCred
  • CRISIS COUNTRY!June 15, 2026
    Botswana faces healthcare collapse, rising debt, diamond sales slump Multiple shocks strain the economy, with the cost of living escalating Retrenchments loom large as companies struggle BAKWADI LEKOPANE editors@thepatriot.co.bw RelatedPosts Bakgatla isolated, furious Motshegwa backtracks CRISIS COUNTRY! Support authors… Read more: CRISIS COUNTRY!
  • Former VP rebrands ahead of BDP’s 2027 congress Tsogwane’s charm offensiveJune 12, 2026
    His latest character appealing to Boko and BDP members Boko calls him Sdala, enjoying his company at state events Some BDP members pursue Tsogwane to lead the party Tsogwane tactically positioned himself in UDC Govt – Analyst BAKANG TIRO… Read more: Former VP rebrands ahead of BDP’s 2027 congress Tsogwane’s charm offensive
The Patriot On Sunday

© 2024 Copyright The Patriot On Sunday - Inspired by Search Mart.

Navigate Site

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Cart
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders

© 2024 Copyright The Patriot On Sunday - Inspired by Search Mart.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?