News24
26 Feb 2021, 23:43 GMT+10
The rand broke below the R15/$ mark overnight - essentially losing gains made in February; this amid a surge in US bond yields which is adding pressure to emerging market currencies.
The rand was the worst performing emerging market currency on Thursday - which came as a shock as it had previously made gains on the back of market risk-on sentiment and higher commodity prices.
Shortly after the tabling of the budget on Wednesday, it strengthened slightly to below R14.50/$ and even reached a 14-month high of R14.38/$ during the day's trading session, according to Bianca Botes, executive director at Citadel Global.
But Thursday brought new surprises. "It tested the R14.80/$ level during the afternoon but soon broke past the R15.00 mark in the overnight session as a spike in US bond yields added pressure to the rand," Botes commented in a market update issued on Friday.
The local unit started the day at R15/$, by mid-morning it had strengthened 1.50% to R14.83 to the greenback.
In addition to the 1.60% spike in US treasury yields (the highest in a year), the US dollar also started clawing back losses from the past few days further impacting emerging markets, Andre Cilliers, currency strategist at TreasuryONE noted.
"The fallout from the US Treasury Yields also resulted in the commodity market selling off with all commodities starting the day in the red," he added. Most commodities were still trading lower by mid-morning, with gold at $1 767, platinum at $1 215 and brent crude at $66 per barrel.
Further ashore, US markets and Asian markets had also been struggling, Cilliers pointed out. "It is evident that the market is currently 'risk-off', and should this push through to the currency space, we could see EM's on the back foot during today's trading," said Cilliers. On the bright side, exporters could benefit, he added.
In a separate note, Investec chief economist Annabel Bishop commented that the strength the rand had displayed following the tabling of the budget had soon faded, this as markets ""digested" the implications of the country's debt.
According to the budget review, the budget deficit for the 2020/21 fiscal year will reach a record 14% of GDP, it is only expected to narrow to 6.3% by 2023/24. Currently debt servicing costs account for 13.4% of the budget or nearly R270 billion. Over the medium term it is expected to avrage 20% of gross tax revenue- this means for every R5 gained in tax revenue, R1 goes toward servicing debt. According to a presentation by Treasury to Parliament on Thursday, debt is projected to grow by 7% of GDP over the next three years.
"Indeed, the rand could weaken somewhat further as the initial exuberance is reversed further on the realisation that the debt trajectory planned now, while lower than October's, is still in excess of that expected a year ago, and well in excess of other EM middle income economies," said Bishop.
Even though the rand was bolstered by commodity prices - foreign investors are starting to differentiate South Africa from other emerging markets - especially as its government bonds are considered "highly risky", she added.
Bishop also noted that investors are in risk-off mode which is contributing to rand weakness.
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