Cape Times

Rand steady, Woolworths leads JSE higher

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THE RAND held steady against a weaker dollar yesterday as investor optimism that a US-Mexico deal would help avert a global trade war boosted appetite for riskier assets.

At 5pm, the rand bid at R14.1222 to the dollar, 1 cent firmer than at the same time on Monday, after rallying briefly to R13.9525 earlier after parliament withdrew an expropriat­ion bill passed in 2016 that allowed the state to make compulsory purchases of land.

The thrust of the bill, which had not been signed into law, has been overtaken by a proposal by the ANC to change the constituti­on to allow the expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on.

Halen Bothma, an analyst at ETM Analytics, said trading was largely range-bound up until the news on land expropriat­ion.

“The market is very sensitive to news around the land expropriat­ion topic, which is understand­able because of its importance to the South African economy,” Bothma said.

“(The rand) reacted strongly but it has erased those moves as people have realised it doesn’t change anything.”

Having tumbled to 2-year lows just shy of R16 mark earlier this month, as the massive sell-off in Turkish lira spread to other emerging markets, the rand has seen increased intra-day volatility in response to news.

The rand was steady as traders eyed talks between the US and Mexico who agreed on Monday to overhaul the North American Free Trade Agreement, putting pressure on Canada to agree to new terms on auto trade and dispute settlement rules to remain part of the three-nation pact.

In fixed income, the yield on the benchmark government paper due in 2026 added 0.5 basis points to 8.875 percent.

Meanwhile, Woolworths led the bourse higher, as several retailers rose on the back of demand in the sector. It gained 4.11 percent to R53.41, Foschini advanced 1.56 percent to R186.30 and Truworths closed 0.54 percent higher at R90.61.

The JSE Top40 index rose 0.61 percent to 53 883.33 points, while the all share index climbed 0.64 percent to 60 039.27 points.

Cashbuild bucked the trend, falling 3.21 percent to R302.94 after reporting a 9 percent drop in annual profit as costs rose and demand dipped.

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