William O'Neil
"Sasol Limited presents a classic CAN SLIM dilemma. On pure O'Neil price-and-volume criteria, SSL has been spectacular — up 252% over 12 months, trading near 52-week highs, well above its rising 50-day and 200-day moving averages, with clear operational catalysts (destoning plant, Natref ISCC PLUS certification, eSAF grant). The 'N' (New) factor is strongly positive. However, three critical CAN SLIM pillars FAIL: 'C' (Current Quarterly EPS declined 34-95%, not the +25% O'Neil demands), 'A' (no consistent 5-year earnings track record; ROE of 5% is well below O'Neil's 17% threshold), and 'I' (institutional sponsorship is weak with major tier-1 institutions reducing positions and analyst consensus at HOLD/Underweight). O'Neil's methodology explicitly favors fundamentally strong growth leaders, not deep-value turnaround plays — and Sasol is fundamentally a turnaround story dependent on debt reduction, operational execution, and commodity price recovery rather than secular growth. The stock's massive run already prices in significant operational success, and Goldman Sachs explicitly flagged limited further re-rating potential. For a strict CAN SLIM disciple, SSL would not qualify as a buy candidate due to failed earnings tests, despite the impressive chart. Existing holders sitting on substantial gains could consider holding while the operational turnaround continues to play out, but new entries this far extended from the base — combined with weak earnings quality and tepid institutional support — do not warrant a BUY rating under O'Neil's framework. A HOLD reflects the tension between strong technicals and weak fundamentals."
Overview
This report provides a CAN SLIM-style investment analysis of Sasol Limited (NYSE: SSL), the South African integrated energy and chemicals company, applying William J. O'Neil's seven-factor methodology from 'How to Make Money in Stocks.' The analysis evaluates SSL through the lens of earnings growth, technical action, institutional sponsorship, and market direction to determine whether the stock qualifies as a CAN SLIM growth candidate at $13.19 as of May 13, 2026.
Financial and Business Overview
Sasol Limited is an integrated energy and chemicals company headquartered in Johannesburg, South Africa, operating proprietary Fischer-Tropsch coal-to-liquids (CTL) and gas-to-liquids (GTL) technologies. The company operates across Mining, Gas, Fuels, Chemicals Africa, and International Chemicals segments. For H1 FY26 (six months ended December 31, 2025), Sasol reported turnover of R122.4 billion (flat YoY), Adjusted EBITDA of R21.0 billion (down 12%), EBIT of R4.6 billion (down 52%), and HEPS of R9.27 (down 34%). However, the company achieved its first positive H1 free cash flow in four years at R0.8 billion, slashed capex by 43% to R8.5 billion, and reduced net debt to $3.8 billion. The destoning plant reached beneficial operation in December 2025, driving a 10% increase in Secunda production volumes. Trailing P/E is elevated at 57.35 due to recent impairments (R7.8 billion in H1 FY26), but forward P/E sits at just 5.85, with forward EPS of $2.26 versus TTM EPS of $0.23. Price-to-book is 0.93, suggesting the stock trades below tangible book value of $14.13.
Market Position & Competitive Advantages
Sasol holds a dominant position in South Africa's integrated fuels market, supplying roughly 20-30% of the country's liquid fuels, and is a meaningful niche player in global specialty chemicals (surfactants, waxes, alcohols). Its proprietary Fischer-Tropsch technology and integrated value chain from coal mining through refining create durable moats with a 20-30% feedstock cost advantage over naphtha-based competitors. Competitive risks include exposure to global chemical overcapacity (Middle East, China), commodity oil price volatility, the 'gas cliff' risk in 2028 when Mozambican gas supplies decline, persistent coal quality issues, South African regulatory and carbon tax exposure, and a junk credit rating. Peers include LyondellBasell, Dow, BASF in chemicals; Shell, Chevron in energy. The International Chemicals reset is progressing but FY26 guidance was cut to $375-450M EBITDA (from $450-550M) due to weaker markets and an unplanned ethylene cracker outage.
Stock Performance
SSL has been on a remarkable rally, with the stock at $13.19 as of May 13, 2026, up +251.97% over the trailing 12 months from a 52-week low of $3.70. The stock is +65.25% above its 200-day moving average ($7.98) and +7.62% above its 50-day moving average ($12.26), indicating a strong, accelerating uptrend with proper stage progression. SSL trades just 8.21% below its 52-week high of $14.37, signaling near-new-high momentum that O'Neil favors. Three-month average daily volume is 2.66 million shares versus 10-day average of 1.57 million, suggesting recent consolidation on lighter volume after the powerful advance. The stock has dramatically outperformed both its specialty chemicals peers and the broader market over the past 12 months. The technical setup shows classic Stage 2 advance characteristics with the 50-day MA acting as support and price holding near highs.
CAN SLIM Analysis
Current Quarterly Earnings Per Share (EPS) Growth:
FAILS O'Neil's 25%+ test. H1 FY26 HEPS declined 34% to R9.27 from R14.13, and basic EPS collapsed 95% to R0.38 due to R7.8 billion in impairments (Secunda refinery R3.0bn, Mozambique PSA R3.9bn, CTT R0.5bn). Adjusted EBITDA fell 12%. While management cites macro headwinds (17% lower rand oil price, weaker chemical prices), the current quarterly earnings picture is decisively negative. However, forward EPS of $2.26 vs. TTM of $0.23 suggests dramatic implied recovery — but this is forecast, not realized. O'Neil would view current EPS trend as a major red flag.
Annual Earnings Increases:
FAILS the 5-year track record test. Sasol's earnings history has been highly volatile, marked by R74.9 billion in FY24 impairments that pushed the company to a loss, followed by FY25 recovery. The company has no consistent 5-year track record of rising EPS. ROE is approximately 5.07%, well below O'Neil's preferred 17%+ threshold. The narrative is a 'turnaround' story rather than a steady compounder — fundamentally inconsistent with CAN SLIM's preference for proven growth companies.
New Products, Management, or Price Highs:
PARTIAL PASS. Strong catalysts present: (1) Destoning plant reached beneficial operation December 2025 — key operational catalyst already delivering 10% Secunda volume uplift; (2) New CEO Simon Baloyi executing Capital Markets Day strategy; (3) EUR 350 million grant for Zaffra eSAF project in Germany; (4) Natref became first African refinery to attain ISCC PLUS certification for Sustainable Aviation Fuel; (5) >1.2 GW renewable energy secured toward 2 GW target; (6) PSA Integrated Processing Facility operational March 2026 enabling first in-country LPG production. Critically, stock is within 8% of its 52-week high, satisfying O'Neil's 'new high' criterion. Geopolitical tailwinds from Middle East conflict have boosted energy security premium.
Supply and Demand:
MIXED. Shares outstanding total 631.2 million — a relatively large float, which O'Neil generally views less favorably than tightly-held small caps. Market cap of $8.4 billion places it in mid-cap territory. Recent volume patterns show 3-month average of 2.66M versus 10-day average of 1.57M, suggesting volume contraction during recent consolidation — typically constructive after a major run. No active buyback program, no dividend (suspended pending sub-$3B net debt achievement targeted for FY28).
Leader or Laggard:
STRONG LEADER on price action. +251.97% one-year performance dramatically exceeds the broad market and specialty chemicals peers. Relative strength is exceptional. However, within its sector, Sasol's fundamentals lag higher-quality peers like Chevron (ROE 7.3%) and Shell (ROE 8.2%). This is the classic O'Neil tension: the stock acts as a leader, but the fundamentals suggest laggard quality. The price-led leadership reflects turnaround momentum and special situation re-rating rather than fundamental dominance.
Institutional Sponsorship:
WEAK/CONFLICTING SIGNALS. Hedge fund ownership rose modestly to 13 funds (from 8 prior quarter). However, key institutions have been reducing: Bank of America cut stake 24%, UBS cut 13.1%, Morgan Stanley reduced 20.4%, JPMorgan trimmed 40.7%, Jump Financial exited entirely. Offsetting buyers include Voleon Capital (+119.7%), Point72 (+134.4%), and Arrowstreet (+59.8%). JP Morgan issued an Underweight rating January 2026. Goldman Sachs downgraded SSL to Neutral from Buy in February citing limited re-rating potential. Average analyst rating is HOLD with target price of ZAR 122 (below current price). The quality of institutional sponsorship is not strong — this is a contrarian/special situation rather than a high-conviction institutional growth holding.
Market Direction:
Market context shows constructive conditions for energy/materials with rotation into hard assets following Middle East conflict and Strait of Hormuz disruption. Commodities and energy security trades have benefited. However, the broader specialty chemicals sector remains under structural pressure with the chemical downturn expected to extend toward 2030. SSL's outperformance is more idiosyncratic (turnaround + oil supply shock beneficiary) than a general market tailwind.
Key Risks
Primary Risk
Execution risk on the operational turnaround thesis combined with macro/commodity volatility. The H1 FY26 results revealed continued impairments (R7.8B), Mozambique gas supply disruptions, and an International Chemicals guidance cut. If Secunda gasifier availability fails to ramp above 70%, or if chemical markets weaken further, the path to sub-$3B net debt (and dividend resumption) extends beyond FY28, removing the key re-rating catalyst.
Secondary Risks
- Mozambique 'gas cliff' in 2028 — failure to secure LNG/alternative supply could materially impact Secunda economics and Southern Africa value chain breakeven.
- South African carbon tax escalation, EU CBAM exposure, and ESG-driven investor avoidance given Sasol's status as one of Africa's largest emitters (>30 MtCO2e at Secunda).
- Stock has run +251% over 12 months and trades near 52-week highs after a parabolic move — significant pullback risk if oil prices reverse or chemicals remain weak.
- Continued institutional outflows from quality tier-1 holders (BofA, UBS, JPM, Morgan Stanley) suggest smart money skepticism on sustainability of the rally.
What Would Change My Mind
I would upgrade my view if: (1) Sasol delivers two consecutive quarters of positive HEPS growth without impairment charges; (2) International Chemicals EBITDA margins reach 10%+; (3) Net debt drops convincingly toward $3 billion enabling dividend reinstatement; (4) Major tier-1 institutions (Fidelity, T. Rowe, BlackRock) initiate or meaningfully add positions; (5) Gasifier availability sustainably exceeds 70%; (6) Goldman/JP Morgan upgrade with raised targets. Conversely, I would turn more bearish on: a break below the 50-day MA on heavy volume, another major impairment announcement, or oil prices retreating below $60/barrel for a sustained period.
Conclusion
Sasol Limited presents a classic CAN SLIM dilemma. On pure O'Neil price-and-volume criteria, SSL has been spectacular — up 252% over 12 months, trading near 52-week highs, well above its rising 50-day and 200-day moving averages, with clear operational catalysts (destoning plant, Natref ISCC PLUS certification, eSAF grant). The 'N' (New) factor is strongly positive. However, three critical CAN SLIM pillars FAIL: 'C' (Current Quarterly EPS declined 34-95%, not the +25% O'Neil demands), 'A' (no consistent 5-year earnings track record; ROE of 5% is well below O'Neil's 17% threshold), and 'I' (institutional sponsorship is weak with major tier-1 institutions reducing positions and analyst consensus at HOLD/Underweight). O'Neil's methodology explicitly favors fundamentally strong growth leaders, not deep-value turnaround plays — and Sasol is fundamentally a turnaround story dependent on debt reduction, operational execution, and commodity price recovery rather than secular growth. The stock's massive run already prices in significant operational success, and Goldman Sachs explicitly flagged limited further re-rating potential. For a strict CAN SLIM disciple, SSL would not qualify as a buy candidate due to failed earnings tests, despite the impressive chart. Existing holders sitting on substantial gains could consider holding while the operational turnaround continues to play out, but new entries this far extended from the base — combined with weak earnings quality and tepid institutional support — do not warrant a BUY rating under O'Neil's framework. A HOLD reflects the tension between strong technicals and weak fundamentals.
Research Sources (18 found)
BUSINESS PERFORMANCE METRICS FOR THE NINE MONTHS ENDED 31 MARCH 2026 AND REVISED GUIDANCE
Published: 4/23/2026
Sasol H1 FY26 EPS drops 95%, dividend withheld | SSL Stock News
Published: 2/23/2026
Sasol Limited (SSL) Earnings Reports & Dates | FXEmpire
Published: 2/23/2026
Sasol Non-GAAP EPS of R 9.20, revenue of R 122.39B | Seeking Alpha
Published: 2/23/2026
Sasol Ltd. (SSL) Releases Q2 2026 Earnings: Revenue and Operating Cash Flow Rise but EPS Falls | Quiver Quantitative
Published: 2/23/2026
Sasol's Debt Diet and Operational Reset: Why the Turnaround Story Is Gaining Traction (NYSE:SSL) - SSL Analysis - BeyondSPX
Published: 12/10/2025
What is Competitive Landscape of Sasol Company? – PortersFiveForce.com
Published: 1/27/2026
How Does Sasol Company Work? – PortersFiveForce.com
Published: 1/27/2026
Sasol H1 Earnings Call Highlights
Published: 2/23/2026
SHORT FORM ANNOUNCEMENT: REVIEWED FINANCIAL RESULTS FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2025 AND UPDATED BUSINESS OUTLOOK
Published: 2/23/2026
Sasol Delivers First Positive H1 Free Cash Flow in Four Years as Deleveraging Accelerates | Fintool
Published: 2/23/2026
Sasol's Board Shuffle: What the Smart Money is Really Watching
Published: 2/17/2026
Sasol : Results presentation for the six months ended 31 December 2025 | MarketScreener
Published: 2/23/2026
Sasol : Results presentation and script for the six months ended 31 December 2025 | MarketScreener
Published: 2/23/2026
Goldman Flags Limited Re-Rating Potential for Sasol Limited (SSL) Amid Oil Volatility
Published: 2/20/2026
Sasol’s rollercoaster: When a 99% earnings crash isn't the whole story
Published: 2/5/2026
Sasol Limited (SSL): A Bull Case Theory
Published: 2/28/2026
Sasol's decarbonisation strategy progresses despite a drop in earnings
Published: 2/23/2026
Search Queries Generated
Sasol Limited SSL earnings per share revenue growth quarterly results 2024
Sasol Limited SSL competitive position market share chemical fuels industry moat
Sasol Limited SSL CEO management strategy capital allocation insider buying selling
Sasol Limited SSL risks concerns challenges bear case problems headwinds
Sasol Limited SSL chemical industry catalysts regulatory impact energy transition macro trends
William O'Neil
"In O’Neil terms, SSL is a turnaround in a weak group—not a current leader. ‘C’ and ‘L’ are not satisfied, ‘I’ is light, and ‘S’ lacks buyback/dividend demand. That said, valuation is compelling (P/B ~0.5; forward P/E ~2.1), FY25 free cash flow improved 75%, net debt fell 13%, and strategic actions are credible. For investors seeking CAN SLIM–style entries, place SSL on the watch list and wait for: (1) clear operational reliability at Secunda/Natref and completion of destoning (H1 FY26); (2) sustained quarterly EPS and margin expansion without one-offs; (3) relative strength improvements and a breakout above US$7.35 (52-week high) on volume. Until then, HOLD for turnaround execution with a disciplined add on a confirmed breakout or on evidence that net debt sustainably drops below US$3bn (dividend trigger), which could catalyze broader sponsorship and a rerating."
Overview
An investor-focused, CAN SLIM–style analysis of Sasol Limited (NYSE: SSL), integrating up-to-date audited FY25 results, operational updates, and market context to assess risk/reward and timing for potential accumulation.
Financial and Business Overview
Business model: Sasol is an integrated energy and chemicals company with a coal-to-liquids (CTL) backbone in South Africa (Secunda/Natref) and a global chemicals portfolio (notably surfactants, alcohols, alumina; Lake Charles, US). FY25 audited results (year ended 30 Jun 2025) show decisive balance-sheet repair and portfolio reset in a tough down-cycle for chemicals. Key FY25 numbers (audited): - Turnover: R249.1bn (-9% y/y) amid lower Rand oil price, weaker refining margins and 3% lower volumes. - Adjusted EBITDA: R51.8bn (-14% y/y); EBIT: R18.8bn (vs LBIT of R27.3bn in FY24) aided by non-recurring items (R4.3bn Transnet settlement; R2.9bn environmental provision reduction), partly offset by lower derivative FX gains. - EPS (Basic): R10.60 (from a loss of R69.94); HEPS: R35.13 (+93% y/y). Note: headline earnings better reflect underlying performance than basic EPS due to non-recurring items. - Free cash flow after tax, interest and capex: R12.6bn (+75% y/y). Capex: R25.4bn (-16%). Cash fixed cost growth kept below inflation. - Net debt (ex leases): R65.0bn (~US$3.7bn), -13% y/y; total long-term debt R103.3bn (-12%). Liquidity enhanced by a R5.3bn ZAR bond (Jul 2025). - Dividend policy: no FY25 dividend; policy now requires sustainable net debt below US$3bn (revised down from US$4bn) before resuming dividends. Operations/updates: - Coal quality issues at Secunda led to a strategic reduction of ~2mt own production and substitution with higher-quality purchased coal until the destoning project (cost <R1bn) completes in H1 FY26. - Disruptions: Natref fire (Jan 2025) and an unplanned Secunda outage impacted fuels and SA chemicals volumes. - International Chemicals: revenue uplift in Q3 FY25 from better pricing, but volumes constrained by US outages; exit of US Phenolics completed (Mar 2025). Division reset underway to lift profitability. - Regulatory: Renewed atmospheric emissions licenses for Secunda and Natref; SA National Treasury retained 60% basic carbon tax-free allowance until at least 2030, supporting transition investment certainty. Valuation snapshot (NYSE ADRs, 23 Sep 2025): price US$6.16; market cap ~US$4.22bn; trailing P/E ~10.1 (ttm EPS ~US$0.61); forward P/E ~2.1 (EPS forward ~US$2.93). Book value per share reported ~ZAR238.5; at ZAR/USD ~0.0535 this is ~US$12.7, implying P/B ~0.5 (note: some feeds display distorted P/B due to ZAR/USD mismatch). Hedging: FY25 program complete; FY26 near complete with oil floor hedges averaging ~US$60/bbl, providing downside protection.
Market Position & Competitive Advantages
Position: Sasol is a critical part of South Africa’s energy value chain (CTL fuels, gas, refining) and a global supplier of surfactants, alcohols, glycols, and specialty aluminas. Customer relationships in chemicals are deep, with a reset under way to shift the mix toward profitable specialties and right-size commodity service levels. Advantages: - Integrated CTL platform with decades of Fischer–Tropsch process know-how; strategic domestic role with pricing linkages to oil and regulated frameworks. - Scale and local producer position in the US (Lake Charles) offers market proximity once reliability and cost structure normalize. - Active portfolio optimization: exiting loss-making phenolics, mothballing high-cost lines, and reorganizing around end markets aims to lift EBITDA margins toward peers. - Balance sheet trending healthier (net debt ex leases US$3.7bn, -13% y/y), disciplined capex, improved FCF, and robust hedging policy. Risks (be honest): - Coal quality and operational reliability at Secunda/Natref can impede volumes and raise costs until destoning completes and reliability improves. - Chemicals cycle remains soft globally with oversupply and margin compression; recovery timing uncertain. - Environmental and carbon tax exposure: Secunda is a large single-point emitter; reliance on offsets is a bridge, not a solution, and policy could tighten. - SA macro/logistics (Transnet, Eskom), FX volatility (ZAR), and potential trade/tariff changes add uncertainty. - Dividend suspended until net debt sustainably below US$3bn; equity holders rely on execution-led rerating near term.
Stock Performance
Price US$6.16 (23 Sep 2025). 52-week range: US$2.78–US$7.34; current ~16% below 52-week high and ~121% above 52-week low. 50-day average ~US$5.93 (price above), 200-day average ~US$4.80 (price well above), showing improving intermediate and long-term trend. Average 3-month volume ~1.28M ADRs. 52-week change ~-13.9% (structured feed), but strong recovery off lows. Multi-year drawdown remains substantial, reflecting past project overruns, impairments, and cycle pressure.
CAN SLIM Analysis
Current Quarterly Earnings Per Share (EPS) Growth:
O’Neil wants strong, accelerating quarterly EPS and sales. FY25 delivered a swing to profit (Basic EPS R10.60; HEPS +93% y/y), but quarterly sales were pressured (turnover -9% for the year; adjusted EBITDA -14%). Material EPS uplift included non-recurring items (R4.3bn Transnet settlement; R2.9bn rehab provision adjustment). Underlying demand and volumes were soft, with SA operational outages. Net: Does not cleanly meet the ‘C’ criterion due to lack of robust, organic quarterly EPS/sales growth and reliance on one-offs.
Annual Earnings Increases:
After FY24 losses, FY25 rebounded (EPS R10.60; HEPS R35.13). Analysts (external) forecast multi-year EPS growth as resets take hold, and the ADR forward P/E (~2.1) implies a strong earnings recovery. However, the 3–5 year history is volatile (impairments, cycle, Lake Charles issues). Net: Mixed-to-positive—clear annual improvement in FY25, but a choppy track record. Sustained multi-year gains still need proof.
New Products, Management, or Price Highs:
‘New’ catalysts: (1) Strategic reset in International Chemicals under EVP Antje Gerber—site closures/mothballing of structurally unprofitable assets, shift to market-aligned structure, targeting a margin uplift; (2) Consideration of a future listing/strategic option for International Chemicals if execution and cycle improve; (3) Renewed emissions licenses; (4) Hedging program providing downside protection; (5) Energy transition initiatives (renewables PPAs, hydrogen/SAF pilots) and expanded carbon credit use to bridge hard-to-abate emissions. Price is not at new highs; shares are below 52-week high but above 50/200-DMAs. Net: ‘N’ is a moderate positive based on strategic changes rather than price highs.
Supply and Demand:
Shares outstanding ~630.4m; average 3M volume ~1.28m (modest turnover). No FY25 dividend; buyback activity not a near-term feature as debt reduction is prioritized. Net debt ex leases ~US$3.7bn remains above the US$3bn dividend trigger. Short interest low (~0.9–1.0%). Net: Neutral-to-negative—no clear buyback/demand tailwind; supply overhang not extreme, but catalysts to shrink float are secondary to deleveraging.
Leader or Laggard:
Chemicals peers’ EBITDA margins are ~12.5% on average in the cycle; Sasol’s recent margins have lagged, with the international division cash-negative after full costs historically. Stock has underperformed over 1–3 years but is improving off lows (price above 50/200-DMAs). Relative Strength is not leadership quality yet. Net: Laggard improving—needs confirmed relative outperformance and margin catch-up.
Institutional Sponsorship:
Institutional ownership is low (~2.5–2.7%), and there is limited evidence of a broad, rising, high-quality sponsor base. O’Neil wants increasing sponsorship from top funds. Net: Weak ‘I’. A rising tide of credible institutions would be a powerful confirmation signal.
Market Direction:
The chemicals cycle remains challenged (oversupply, weak demand pockets, geopolitics), with sector EBITDA margins compressed. That is a macro headwind for traditional CAN SLIM breakouts. On the positive side, oil hedges (FY26 floors ~US$60) and better SA carbon tax visibility stabilize planning. Net: Mixed-to-negative—sector trend still not broadly favorable; timing matters.
Conclusion
In O’Neil terms, SSL is a turnaround in a weak group—not a current leader. ‘C’ and ‘L’ are not satisfied, ‘I’ is light, and ‘S’ lacks buyback/dividend demand. That said, valuation is compelling (P/B ~0.5; forward P/E ~2.1), FY25 free cash flow improved 75%, net debt fell 13%, and strategic actions are credible. For investors seeking CAN SLIM–style entries, place SSL on the watch list and wait for: (1) clear operational reliability at Secunda/Natref and completion of destoning (H1 FY26); (2) sustained quarterly EPS and margin expansion without one-offs; (3) relative strength improvements and a breakout above US$7.35 (52-week high) on volume. Until then, HOLD for turnaround execution with a disciplined add on a confirmed breakout or on evidence that net debt sustainably drops below US$3bn (dividend trigger), which could catalyze broader sponsorship and a rerating.
Research Sources (15 found)
Sasol Limited (SSL) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript
Published: 8/25/2025
SASOL LIMITED - Audited Financial Results For The Year ...
Published: 8/25/2025
Sasol (SOL) Balance Sheet & Financial Health Metrics - Simply Wall St
Published: 6/30/2025
Sasol (SSL) Financial Ratios
Published: 7/22/2025
Sasol Debt to Equity Ratio Trends
Published: 7/16/2025
Sasol’s chemical leader details turnaround plans
Published: 8/18/2025
LyondellBasell Poised for Long-Term Profit Growth Despite Near-Term Slowdown and Tariff Uncertainty
Published: 4/25/2025
SABIC's Strategic Restructuring and Market Position in a Downturning Petrochemical Industry
Published: 8/3/2025
Sasol Limited (SSL) Latest Stock News & Headlines - Yahoo Finance
Published: 5/15/2025
Sasol's (SSL) Stock Rises on Profits, Carbon Credit Surge ...
Published: 8/26/2025
SASOL HOSTS CAPITAL MARKETS DAY AND THE SASOL LIMITED BOARD APPROVES A CHANGE IN DIVIDEND POLICY
Published: 5/20/2025
ZAR USD | South African Rand to US Dollar Rate
Published: 9/23/2025
Sasol Tackles Coal Quality Crisis: Chemical Revenue Growth Offsets Production Setbacks in Latest Results
Published: 4/17/2025
SASOL LIMITED: PRODUCTION AND SALES METRICS FOR THE NINE MONTHS ENDED 31 MARCH 2025
Published: 4/17/2025
Sasol (JSE:SOL) Stock Forecast & Analyst Predictions - Simply Wall St
Published: 4/30/2025
Search Queries Generated
Sasol SSL financial health analysis of earnings growth debt levels cash flow and profitability for Sasol SSL
Sasol SSL market position assessment of Sasol SSL competitive leadership in global energy and chemical markets against peers
Sasol SSL recent news overview of headlines affecting Sasol SSL stock performance including strategic moves or asset changes
Sasol SSL competitive risks evaluation of risks from competitors price competition and feedstock costs for Sasol SSL
Sasol SSL market share trends and financial pressures assessment of debt acquisition challenges and capital allocation for Sasol SSL