Rand takes another tumble

File picture: Waldo Swiegers, Bloomberg

File picture: Waldo Swiegers, Bloomberg

Published Dec 8, 2015

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Johannesburg - The rand fell to a record against the dollar and bonds tumbled, sending yields to their highest levels since February 2014, after Fitch Ratings cut South Africa’s credit rating and Standard & Poor’s lowered its outlook on the country’s debt.

The rand declined as much as 1.3 percent to 14.5629 per dollar before paring some of its losses, weakening with most major and emerging-market currencies as the greenback rose on speculation a strengthening US economy will boost the pace at which the Federal Reserve increases interest rates. Yields on benchmark rand debt rose for a ninth day, increasing by the most in more than six weeks.

Fitch cut South Africa’s credit rating one level on Friday to BBB-, the lowest investment grade, and in line with the assessment of S&P’s, which lowered its outlook to negative from stable.

The country’s growth potential has deteriorated further, with a power shortage likely to constrain an expansion for the next two years, Fitch said, which also cited the government’s decision not to tighten fiscal policy in the face of weakening revenue and rising debt levels. Flexibility around the budget might reduce because of risks associated with funding needs of state-owned companies, S&P said.

“The rating agencies’ concerns are certainly valid, with the glacial pace of structural reform digging the hole that the economy finds itself in ever-deeper,” said Bart Stemmet, an analyst at NKC African Economics, based in Paarl, near Cape Town.

“Brave leadership is needed to drive the deep structural reforms needed to put the South African economy back on track, but one wonders whether the spectre of being rated junk would be enough to spark such a drive.”

The currency of Africa’s most industrialised economy weakened to 14.5536 per dollar as of 5.44pm in Johannesburg, extending losses this year to more than 20 percent, the most among 31 emerging-market and major currencies after Brazil’s real and Colombia’s peso. Yields on government rand-denominated debt due December 2026 climbed 10 basis points, the most since October 21, to 8.76 percent.

The rand may see more weakness during the week, according to Annabel Bishop, chief economist at Johannesburg-based Investec. S&P’s outlook change was “less expected”, while the Fitch ratings cut was “mostly priced into the markets”, she said.

BLOOMBERG

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