Rand gains against the dollar

Picture: Siphiwe Sibeko

Picture: Siphiwe Sibeko

Published Apr 19, 2016

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Johannesburg - South Africa's rand firmed to a four-month high against the dollar on Tuesday, tracking a recovery in commodity currencies in the face of stabilising oil prices.

At 07h35 GMT, the rand traded at 14.3980 versus the dollar, 0.5 percent stronger from Monday's New York close. The rand touched a session high of 14.3700, the firmest it has been since December 7, according to Thomson Reuters data.

“It's emerging markets plus commodity currencies that are doing very well and that is on the back of some good news ... oil has made the commodity currencies bounce a lot,” Treasury One chief dealer Wichard Cilliers.

Currencies such as the rand, which are affected by commodity prices came under pressure on Monday after major oil producers failed to agree on an output freeze, but recovered on Tuesday due to a Kuwaiti oil strike that has led to a cut in production.

The rand's gains mirrored those of the Australian dollar which reached an 11-month high against the greenback.

The rand is close to testing a new level of technical resistance at 14.25/30 against the dollar and re-testing the top line of the 5-year channel it broke out of in April last year, analysts said.

Government bonds also strengthened, with the yield for the benchmark instrument due in 2026 falling 4.5 basis points to 8.925 percent.

On the bourse, the Top-40 and the broader all-share index both ticked up 0.3 percent in early trade.

REUTERS

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