The hospitality industry has borne the brunt of the black swan event that is Covid-19.

Loading player...
Gugu Mfuphi Talks to Mark Havercroft, Minor Hotels Regional Director For Africa about The hospitality industry has borne the brunt of the black swan event that is Covid-19. Faced with global shutdowns of their properties, dominant international hotel management brands from Marriott to Raddisson and others have everything to lose if they don't get the recovery aspect of their plans right. And Africa, particularly SSA will take centre stage for all hospitality growth spend when the world gets back to business.

According to a McKinsey & Company estimate, the world’s youngest and fastest-urbanising continent, Africa, will see 24 million more people added to its total city population annually in the years to 2045 – more than India and China combined, making the continent stand out for offering the greatest potential for ROI in hospitality investments.

The race to capture the continent for the big boys of the hospitality game was already underway before the virus hit but it will only intensify now as challenger brands will be able to compete in a recovering business space where suddenly value really matters and the big brand names have been shown to be vulnerable and unable to use their dominance to protect hotel owners and investors.

One of those challenger brands in Africa is Minor Hotels. Although Minor Hotels is one of the largest hospitality and leisure companies in the Asia Pacific region with 537 hotels in operation in 55 countries it is a relative newcomer to the continent and has its sights firmly on eating the lunch of the region's dominant players.
7 Apr 2020 12PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

Manufacturing Slips: June Absa PMI Signals Q2 Strain

Absa Economist Sello Sekele unpacks June’s PMI decline from 50.8 to 47.3, the impact of easing Middle East tensions on fuel prices, the sharp drop in purchasing price pressures, weakening demand as buyers delay purchases, and why employment and inventories point to continued strain in South Africa’s manufacturing sector.
2 Jul 1PM 12 min

Tax Season Scams: AI Fraud, WhatsApp Spoofing & Digital Red Flags

Cybercriminals are exploiting tax‑season anxiety with AI‑generated phishing emails, cloned SARS websites, WhatsApp spoofing and payroll‑related scams. Lucas Molefe explains why 2026 is a high‑risk year, how scammers mimic official communication, and the digital hygiene habits that protect your identity and refund. Essential listening for every taxpayer.
2 Jul 1PM 9 min

Tax Season 2026: Must-Knows with Commissioner Dr. Johnstone Makhubu

SARS Commissioner Dr. Johnstone Makhubu unpacks the 2026 Filing Season, from the phased rollout and enhanced risk engine to the rise of auto‑assessments. He explains how taxpayers should interpret assessments, and navigate a more targeted audit environment. A clear, practical guide to filing smarter this year.
2 Jul 12PM 17 min

The Second Bond: The Hidden Costs Homebuyers Miss

Jonathan Kohler exposes the “second bond” — the monthly bill homeowners face before paying their actual home loan. From R4,000–R7,000 in Johannesburg and Cape Town to over R11,500 in Umhlanga, we unpack levies, utilities, maintenance, special levies and municipal tariffs that determine true affordability. A must‑listen for buyers, investors and…
1 Jul 1PM 27 min

SA New Vehicle Sales post strongest June result since 2007

South Africa’s new vehicle market delivered a standout June performance despite inflation, fuel price spikes and weaker consumer confidence. Dr Paulina Mamogobo, Chief Economist at NAAMSA, breaks down the domestic resilience, export pressures, shifting macroeconomic signals, and what these trends mean for the industry heading into the second half of…
1 Jul 12PM 20 min