Business Day

JSE loses ground for second day

- Odwa Mjo Markets Writer mjoo@businessli­ve.co.za

The JSE closed in negative territory on Thursday for a second consecutiv­e day as investors worry about global economic growth, while markets await labour data from the US.

Markets will be watching US nonfarm payrolls for September, which will be released on Friday. The data is seen as an indicator of the health of the US economy after poor manufactur­ing data earlier this week fuelled concerns of an economic slowdown.

Shortly after the JSE closed, the Dow was flat at 26,093.43 points.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 lost 0.89% and France’s CAC 40 0.11%, while Germany’s DAX 30 was closed for German Unity Day. Earlier, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 0.37%, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 dropped 2.01%.

At 5.17pm, the rand firmed 1.06% to R15.1299/$, 0.84% to R16.6185/€ and 0.27% to R18.7568/£. The euro strengthen­ed 0.22% to $1.0984.

“The rand is still lagging its emerging-market peers and markets will be looking out for the medium-term budget policy statement before we possibly see a bigger recovery,” said TreasuryON­E senior currency dealer Andre Botha.

Gold added 0.6% to $1,508.76/oz and platinum 0.56% to $892.76. Brent crude was down 0.24% to $57.3 a barrel. The JSE all share fell 0.51% to 53,727.3 points and the top 40 0.54%. Resources dropped 0.69%, while gold miners climbed 2.53%.

The firmer rand put some pressure on rand hedges: British American Tobacco fell 2.25% to R523.77, Richemont 1.99% to R104.50 and AB InBev 1.63% to R1,372.20.

Brait gained 1.81% to R15.22. The investment company announced on Thursday that billionair­e Christo Wiese has appointed former head of RMB’s global corporate finance business, Paul Roelofse, as his alternate on the company’s board,

Vunani jumped 16.67% to R2.10. The company said on Thursday it expected basic earnings per share and headline earnings per share (HEPS) to decrease between 21.2% and 41.2%, to between 9.2c and 12.4c, in the six months to end-August. The fund manager said the decrease is attributab­le to the declining performanc­e of its commoditie­s trading businesses.

Datatec fell 1.33% to R32.65. The IT company said on Thursday it expected its HEPS to more than double in the six months to end-August to between 2 and 2.5 US cents.

Zeder fell 0.65% to R4.62. The company said on Thursday that it expected its HEPS to have fallen as much as 93.4% in the six months to end-August, to between 2c and 2.8c

Food and beverage company, Clover will de-list from the JSE on Wednesday after the Competitio­n Tribunal approved a R4.8bn takeover of the company by consortium Milco in September. Its share price was little changed at R24.83.

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