R17 per dollar? Analyst sees gloomy times

File picture: Mike Hutchings

File picture: Mike Hutchings

Published Jul 11, 2016

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Johannesburg - South Africa’s rand is overvalued and has little chance of strengthening in the next year due to the policies of President Jacob Zuma’s “populist” government, according to the currency’s best forecaster for the past four quarters. Instead it may weaken to 17 per dollar.

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A recovery in the rand, which has gained 6 percent against the dollar this year after a 25 percent decline in 2015, will be cut short because South Africa’s government is losing the confidence of foreign investors, said Matthias Krieger, an analyst at Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg, which was the best dollar-rand forecaster in a Bloomberg survey.

“The deteriorating competitiveness of South Africa and the populist government of Jacob Zuma is the reason why I’m convinced we’ll see a weaker rand over the year,” Krieger said from Stuttgart, Germany. He expects the currency to drop 17 percent by year-end. “I am pretty pessimistic about the political cost of South Africa.”

Zuma’s decisions have hit the rand before. The currency slumped to a record in December when the president surprised markets by firing Nhlanhla Nene as finance minister in December and replacing him with a little-known lawmaker. Investors dumped South African assets, forcing Zuma to reconsider. He re-appointed Pravin Gordhan to the position he held from 2009 to 2014.

South Africans vote for local government leaders in three and a half weeks. Five people died in violence around the capital, Pretoria, stemming from anger over the ruling party’s choice of mayoral candidate. Zuma’s party faces mounting discontent over unemployment and poverty and a series of scandals implicating the president.

Populist bias

The government “shows an overall bias” to act more populist, Krieger said. “This is the basic balance of the government and I’m afraid this will go on because unemployment is pretty high in South Africa and should remain so.”

Zuma has stymied efforts by Gordhan to appoint a new board for the unprofitable state airline and has refused Gordhan’s demands to fire the nation’s tax chief for insubordination. In March, South Africa’s top court found Zuma violated the Constitution when he defied a directive by the nation’s graft ombudsman to repay state funds spent on his private home. In April, the High Court ruled that prosecutors erred when they dropped a corruption case against Zuma seven years ago, opening the way for 783 charges against him to be reinstated.

The rand gained 1.2 percent against the dollar to 14.5789 by 6.13pm in Johannesburg on Friday.

Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg has topped the Bloomberg survey for the best dollar-rand exchange rate forecaster in the past four quarters. The lender’s prediction is 8 percent weaker than the median forecast of analysts in the survey. Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, the second best-rated, is less pessimistic, saying the currency has already weakened sharply and should end the year at 15.75.

“A lot of the bad news is priced” in, said Lee Hardman, currency strategist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ in London. “We wouldn’t have an outright bullish view. We’re still thinking the rand will weaken, but only modestly.”

* With assistance from Wei Lu

BLOOMBERG

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