Cape Times

Rand stronger, Steinhoff lifts the bourse

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THE RAND firmed against the dollar yesterday as the greenback retreated, while a recovery of Steinhoff’s shares following a week of turmoil at the global retailer lifted blue chip stocks.

At 5pm, the rand bid at R13.5899 to the dollar, 1.03c stronger than at the same time on Friday.

The dollar edged lower against a basket of currencies yesterday, snapping a five-day rising streak as investors took profits before a US central bank meeting this week.

Further gains were curbed by nervous investors ahead of the ANC leadership conference this weekend, where a successor to party leader, President Jacob Zuma, will be elected.

“We suspect, however, that the rand’s gains are going to abate and the market will be cautious going into the weekend given the decisive vote is due on Sunday,” said John Cairns, a currency strategist at Rand Merchant Bank.

Investors also readied for a heavy week of data, including consumer price inflation and current account numbers.

The yield on the country’s benchmark government bond due in 2026 edged up 1 basis point to 9.215 percent.

On the stock market, the benchmark JSE Top40 index advanced 0.08 percent to 51 711.22 points, while the all share index was down – 0.03 percent at 57 997.33 points.

Shares in household goods retailer Steinhoff recovered some of their losses suffered after the company flagged accounting irregulari­ties last week, rallying 55.83 percent to R9.35.

The company, which has its primary listing in Frankfurt, asked its lenders for “continued support” as it focuses on cash-flow to keep its operations running after its chief executive resigned and its shares tanked 80 percent in four days.

There was some buying of the stock off a low base, but most investors were waiting for more informatio­n, said Independen­t Securities trader, Ryan Woods.

“On the positive side, it does look like Christo Wiese is doing a salvage job,” Woods added, referring to the retail group’s biggest shareholde­r and its chairman, who is temporaril­y at the helm.

Banks weighed on the bourse, with the banking index shedding 2.7 percent and Barclays Africa Group, the biggest blue chip loser, down 4.13 percent to R150.50.

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