The Independent on Saturday

What to expect from your investment­s

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As savers and retirement fund investors, we should be focused on the long-term returns we can earn, rather than the short-term implicatio­ns of the recent political events and the downgradin­g of South African bonds will have short-term implicatio­ns for your investment­s

Understand­ing, what the short term implicatio­ns may be, however, can be reassuring.

EQUITIES

The local share market, as measured by the All Share index, moved mostly higher after a bit of decline late last week, despite the downgrade of South Africa’s bonds by the ratings agencies this week.

However, you should expect some volatility in equities as the political uncertaint­y prevails.

Lesiba Mothata, chief economist at Investment Solutions, says volatility is likely to increase and the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) will be closely monitoring the developmen­ts in the markets to see if the ensuing sell off becomes disorderly and threatens the stability of the financial system.

Should the decline in bank shares, the rise in bond yields and the fall in the rand create instabilit­y in markets through intensifie­d capital flight, it would not be surprising to see a response from the SARB that includes hiking interest rates, even when the recent dovish comments were premised on moderating inflation expectatio­ns, Mothata says.

Shaun le Roux, a fund manager at PSG Asset Management, says the South African financial markets have been rocked by negative political developmen­ts for some time, and you should remember that a lot of the ‘bad’ news was already reflected in share prices.

He says the global economy is supportive of strong returns from many South African assets, should the political situation stabilise. Commodity prices have recovered sharply over the past year and the drought in the north has been broken, he says.

The weak rand has underpinne­d strong improvemen­ts in the trade balance and the tourism sector has been booming. The global economy is also enjoying a period of synchronis­ed growth, an environmen­t that is usually very kind to emerging-market economic growth, he says.

“In times like these, it is especially important that investors focus on their long-term investment objectives and make decisions that boost the probabilit­y of achieving those objectives. Most importantl­y, take care to avoid the common mistake of selling low and buying high,” he says.

CASH

Adrian Goslett, the regional director and chief executive of RE/ MAX of Southern Africa says, if there is an upside to the downgrade, it will be for consumers who have cash. If interest rates rise as predicted, your cash investment­s will earn a higher return, but remember that if inflation also rises, you may not earn a higher real, or after-inflation, return.

BONDS

The rating downgrade by Standard & Poor’s (S&P) has taken the foreign currency component of debt issued (10 percent of the total) to non-investment grade BB+ and local-currency denominate­d debt (90 percent) has been pushed one notch down to BBB-, which is still investment grade, Mothata says.

The Fitch downgrade late yesterday takes both local and foreign debt to BB+.

Mothata says S&P decision, although a hugely negative outcome for South Africa, does not impact the country’s eligibilit­y in global bond indices as yet.

South Africa is included in a few indices but the most widely-used global bond benchmark is the Citigroup World Government Bond Index which has clearly-stipulated exit requiremen­ts for a country. A country will be removed from the index only if three criteria are met, one of which is that country gets downgraded into non-investment grade by both Moody’s and S&P on its long-term domestic credit.

At this stage, South Africa remains safe within global bond benchmarks as the three exit requiremen­ts have not yet been triggered, Mothata says.

South Africa may be excluded from the Barclays Global Aggregate Bond Index as a result of the Fitch downgrade, but the country’s weighting in that index is small at 0.025 percent, Mokgatla Madisha, the head of fixed interest at Sanlam Investment Management, says. Despite the fact that South African bonds are still included in leading indices, Madisha says the bond markets have priced in the downgrade with a 0.8 percentage point increase in bond yields over the past week which reduced bond portfolio values by about four percent.

Madisha says the negative outlook that S&P retained on its rating, suggests that they see scope for further action if there are no corrective actions taken. How policymake­rs respond to the downgrade is going to be crucial, he says. If South Africa is to regain investment grade status, tough decisions are needed. Faster fiscal consolidat­ion is imperative and the Budget needs to be more resilient, which means expenditur­e must be more aligned with revenue growth.

Sanlam Investment Management (SIM) neverthele­ss has a high weighting relative to its benchmark in South African long bonds in its flagship multi asset fund, the SIM Balanced Fund.

The real yield on offer remains attractive relative to that of other developed and emerging markets. Madisha says part of the high yield on offer can be ascribed to the political risk South Africa has been facing.

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