Business Day

JSE awaiting a decision on Nene

- Maarten Mittner Markets Writer

The JSE all share closed at its lowest level this year on Monday, amid uncertaint­y about the future of finance minister Nhlanhla Nene, who reportedly earlier offered to stand down.

It was also reported that the presidency had not received Nene’s offer.

The rand fell to almost R15 to the dollar as pressure mounted on Nene to quit after he admitted to meeting the controvers­ial Gupta family at their home several times. It emerged when Nene testified at the commission of inquiry into state capture last week.

The Dow Jones was open despite it being a public holiday in the US. At the JSE’s close it was down 0.31% to 26,367 points.

Emerging markets were on edge after the Chinese central bank’s decision to stimulate the economy with further easing measures, and after a right-wing populist candidate won the first round of the presidenti­al elections in Brazil.

The move by the Chinese authoritie­s appeared to work against them, with the Shanghai composite tumbling nearly 4% amid concerns about growth prospects in the economy.

Chinese markets as a whole are under tremendous pressure, FXTM analyst Jameel Ahmad said.

“We have seen a trend in the past where weakness in China has resonated to other global markets.”

European stocks were also lower after the European Commission said Italy’s budget plans are a “source of serious concern”, raising prospects of a clash between Rome and Brussels.

The all share closed 0.35% lower at 54,219.20 points and the top 40 lost 0.45%. Platinums relinquish­ed 1.88%, the gold index 1.07%, resources 0.95%, banks 0.44% and industrial­s 0.22%. Property rose 1.03%.

Sasol was down 1.32% to R546.04, after Brent crude fell 0.61% to $83.48 a barrel. South32 fell 3.79% to end the day at R41.62 and Anglo American shed 0.99% to R320.31. FirstRand lost 1.3% to R60.90. Resilient stood out in the property sector, jumping 6.46% to R60.16.

Woolworths gained 2.17% to R48.58 but Shoprite slipped 0.62% to close at R182.20.

Asset manager Sygnia plunged 12.27% to R7.72.

The rand was last at R14.8893/$ from R14.7975, while the euro had fallen to $1.1475 from $1.1523.

The US 10-year treasury closed at 3.2296% on Friday amid data that showed a still-booming US economy, tempered slightly by disappoint­ing nonfarm payroll data on Friday.

Foreigners were net sellers of local bonds to the value of almost R5bn over last week. Nonresiden­ts hold about 40% of government debt.

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