October is high-risk month for SA rand recovery

The rand rebounded 3.9 percent in September after a 9.6 percent slump in August. Photo: File

The rand rebounded 3.9 percent in September after a 9.6 percent slump in August. Photo: File

Published Oct 1, 2018

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JOHANNESBURG - Emerging markets are rebounding from the second-quarter horror show but for South Africa’s rand, October still holds large risks.

Two events, in particular, loom large: Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene’s medium-term budget policy statement, and a review of the country’s credit ratings by Moody’s Investors Service.

The rand rebounded 3.9 percent in September after a 9.6 percent slump in August, the worst for that month on record. It could extend gains as the dollar takes a breather, according to Neels Heyneke and Mehul Daya, strategists at Johannesburg-based Nedbank Group.

Much hinges, however, on Nene, who has to reassure both Moody’s and investors that he has a handle on spending and debt. Last year, a widening fiscal deficit and slower economic growth projections led S&P Global Ratings and Fitch Ratings Ltd. to strip the country of its investment rating, sending yields skyrocketing and the rand weaker. That won’t be easy, given that the economy is struggling to emerge from a first-half recession.

“October is key,” said Christopher Shiells, a London-based emerging-markets analyst at Informa Global Markets Ltd. “We and Moody’s want to see a medium-term budget policy statement that focuses on fiscal consolidation, and stabilizing debt levels, given the low growth environment.”

A positive statement from Nene could push the rand to about 13.75 per dollar, from about 14.22 on Friday, he said.

Moody’s rates South Africa’s local-currency debt at Baa3, the lowest investment level. The rating company’s stable outlook on the debt means there is little chance of a change in the assessment soon, though it said last month South Africa has to stabilize its debt to prevent a change to negative.

Disappointing Moody’s would prove costly. Foreign investors own almost 40 percent of South Africa’s R1.97 trillion of local-currency bonds. Should the country lose its investment rating, it would be excluded from Citigroup Inc.’s World Government Bond Index, sparking outflows of about $5 billion as investors who track the gauge are forced to sell, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

“The bar for Moody’s to act remains high but WGBI exclusion is a long-term risk,” Gabriele Foa, a London-based analyst at BofAML, said in a note dated September 26. “Rough math suggests that while it is not an immediate risk, the long-term risks from potential investment-grade losses remain elevated.”

Moody’s was scheduled to review South Africa’s credit rating on Oct. 12, but said last month it may delay until after the budget statement on Oct. 24. For now, traders aren’t overly concerned, if options pricing is anything to go by. The premium of options to sell the currency over those to buy it in the next month, known as the 25 Delta risk reversal, traded near its the lowest levels in almost two months on Monday at 3.1 percentage points.

The rand was 0.1 percent weaker at 14.1537 per U.S. dollar by 7:45 a.m. in Johannesburg.

- BLOOMBERG 

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