The Mercury

Zuma fails to rekindle the rand

SOUTH AFRICA’S NATIONAL FINANCIAL DAILY Gordhan support not effective

- Siseko Njobeni

PRESIDENT Jacob Zuma and his deputy Cyril Ramaphosa’s public support for embattled Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan yesterday failed to lift the rand after the currency rebounded in early trade but fell again as their pledges failed to inspire the markets.

The rand opened at R14.1486 to the dollar but fell to R14.32 around 4pm only to recover to R14.2777 by 5pm.

Earlier, the currency and stocks rallied after Zuma pledged his full confidence in Gordhan but said he could not stop the Hawks from investigat­ing any individual.

The rand has weakened 5 percent against the greenback this week.

Ramaphosa’s support for Gordhan was more emphatic.

Speaking at the funeral of late former sports minister Makhenkesi Stofile in Alice in the Eastern Cape, Ramaphosa said he had confidence in the finance minister and the way he was doing his job.

War against itself

“When a government works well, it should not wage a war against itself,” he said. Ramaphosa said the fact that Gordhan could be facing arrest “should concern us”.

He also had a word for state institutio­ns: “Whatever various agencies of government have to do, we should do it in a way that does not destabilis­e government, that does not destabilis­e our economy and does not demonstrat­e to our people that we are a government that is at war with itself.”

The rand strengthen­ed 1.2 percent to 13.95 per dollar at 11.24 am while the yield on rand-denominate­d bonds due in December 2026 dropped 9basis points to 8.96percent.

“At least he’s coming out to support the finance minister, that’s helping,” said Ion de Vleeschauw­er, the chief dealer at Bidvest Bank in Johannesbu­rg. “That’s calming the market fears a little bit. Every little comment that comes out that’s telling people it’s fine and we’re good, that will help.”

Per Hammarlund, the chief emerging markets strategist at Swedish bank SEB Group said the rand strengthen­ed along with other emerging markets’ currencies on the back of profit-taking following the dollar rally over the last few days and favourable global risk appetite.

Rand firmed this much in morning trade

Hammarlund said at one point, the rand strengthen­ed more than the others when Zuma expressed his “full confidence” in Gordhan.

He said Zuma’s announceme­nt was an attempt at damage control and was meant to limit the impact on markets and appease the rating agencies.

“However, he also said that he cannot intervene to stop the investigat­ion, so the issue is not over. Zuma’s faction… will likely see strengthen­ing or even stability of the rand as an invitation to increase the pressure on Gordhan. In addition, the rand is no longer particular­ly undervalue­d, which increases the downside risk potential,” he said.

He said the rand would be particular­ly volatile with a

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