The Star Early Edition

SA humour proves stronger than rand

Rand plunges to record lows JSE edges toward bear market territory Chinese economic worries send shivers

- – Staff Reporter

THE RAND may have had a meltdown, but South Africans’ sense of humour was at an all-time high yesterday.

As volatile Chinese markets rocked the global economy, the currency fell to its lowest point in 14 years, trading as high as R14.07 to the dollar.

As panicked traders scrambled to stabilise the markets, Twitter users poked fun at a potentiall­y disastrous situation.

The hashtag #StrongerTh­anTheRand trended as people used humour to ease their worries.

People quickly came up with funny lines, inspired by sport, politics, news and pop culture, and no one was spared.

@benedictnp­g tweeted: “The pumpkin at Oscar Pistorius shooting range #StrongerTh­anTheRand”.

On the sports front, @Muhammad_ L04 tweets: “The chances of Liverpool winning the Champions League this season #StrongerTh­anTheRand”.

President Jacob Zuma was also not spared.

@lindemalon­e wrote: “The chance of JZ paying back the money is #StrongerTh­anTheRand”.

As the list grew, people roped in pop culture.

@mj_lento tweeted: “Blackberry battery #StrongerTh­anTheRand” and @zataranian­a said: “Odds of finding a matching lid for that Tupperware #strongerth­antherand”.

All jokes aside, though, economists predict that things will only get worse for the South African currency.

The drop was caused largely by concerns that the booming growth of the Chinese economy is likely to end soon. China is one of South Africa’s major export partners.

SOUTH African financial markets went into free-fall yesterday, sending the rand to record lows against the US dollar and the British pound, while the JSE edged toward bear market territory as investors dumped emerging market assets on concerns about the health of the Chinese economy.

The growing spectre of a tit-for-tat global currency war compounded the turmoil in the world’s markets, helping boost the safe-haven allure of the US dollar and treasuries.

The volatility in the rand left the SA Reserve Bank with a tough choice to make regarding the extent to which it can keep raising interest rates while trying not to push the economy off a cliff with higher borrowing costs.

The rand swung wildly in volatile trade yesterday, and hit a record low of R14.0682 against the US currency in early trade as the appetite for riskier assets continued to wane. It had traded at R12.93 late on Friday.

The currency slide yesterday capped a drop of more than 10 percent in the rand since the Reserve Bank had raised interest rates by 25 basis points on July 23, as markets anticipate­d that the US Federal Reserve would start hiking its interest rate from September.

The rand was one of the biggest losers among emerging market currencies, including the Turkish lira, the Indian rupee, the Brazilian real and the Russian rouble.

“It’s a global currency crisis,” Azar Jammine, a director and chief economist at Econometri­x, said. “Since China devalued the yuan, the currencies of emerging markets have come under pressure.”

He said ructions in global markets were inevitable as asset prices in emerging and developed markets had reached bubble proportion­s amid a wave of easy money brought on by low interest rates.

Even so, the biggest headache for investors was the health of the Chinese economy, Jammine said. He added that he was among people who now doubted China’s professed growth rate of 7 percent.

“There are fears that China is going to slow down more than people initially expected. If there’s a hard-landing in China, there’s every reason to be worried because the Chinese will devalue the yuan further,” he said.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average shed more than a 1 000 points, a historic intra-day slide. The blue chip index has never lost more than 800 points in a day. All three major US indices – the Dow, benchmark S&P 500 and the Nasdaq composite – are now in a correction: down 10 percent or more from their most recent closing records.

Inflation risk

In response to Business Report’s request for comment, the Treasury said: “The weaknesses of the rand against the dollar is broadly in line with the changes in other emerging market currencies.”

Treasury spokeswoma­n Phumza Macanda said: “The knock-on impact on inflation remains a risk that the SA Reserve Bank is monitoring closely as it follows its mandate on inflation. Furthermor­e the implicatio­n will also depend on how large and how sustained the shifts in the trends in the currency are.”

A currency crisis is the last thing South Africa needs as it confronts the prospect of massive job losses in the mining sector amid declines in the prices of some of its major mineral exports.

Year-to-date platinum prices have dropped more than 18 percent. The Bloomberg commodity index fell almost 2 percent yesterday, and headed for the lowest closing level since 1999.

Brent crude slipped below $45 (R583) a barrel for the first time since March 2009, while a barrel of US crude traded at $39.18. Copper lost 2.6 percent.

Meanwhile, Chinese stocks tumbled further, with the Shanghai composite index sliding 8.5 percent, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 5.8 percent.

The JSE all share index yesterday was down 15 percent from a record closing high set in April. The sell-off on the JSE was broad-based but shares of commodity companies dominated the losers’ board, along with those of consumer oriented companies, including clothing retailers, cellphone operators, big industrial manufactur­ers and financial services firms.

More than $5 trillion has been erased from the value of global equities since China unexpected­ly devalued the yuan, fuelling concern that the slowdown in the world’s secondlarg­est economy may be deeper than previously thought.

Capital flight

SA Chamber of Commerce and Industry economist Richard Downing said the rand had exposed South Africa to capital flight. “The currency deprecia- tion and the month-on-month volatility does not inspire confidence in South Africa as an economic and investment destinatio­n. Business confidence is already way below acceptable levels and we are now compoundin­g the concerns with a volatile currency.”

He added: “There is a clear movement of money leaving South Africa because it is not seen as a safe place to invest.”

According to Jammine, the Reserve Bank will have no alternativ­e but to hike rates aggressive­ly to curb the inflationa­ry impact of the rand.

He did not rule out the possibilit­y of a hike as big as 50 basis points next month as inflation would be a bigger menace to the economy in the long run, and with devastatin­g consequenc­es for ordinary South Africans.

He said the rand had become a proxy for sentiment over Africa because China’s economic problems would curtail demand for raw material exports, depress local currencies further and create a negative loop for government finances.

All things being equal, the rand’s slide will be a boon for South African exports but the electricit­y shortage has left companies less prepared to invest. – Additional reporting by Sechaba Nkosi, Bloomberg and Reuters. Follow Ellis Mnyandu on Twitter: @Ellis_Mnyandu

The rand’s trade to the dollar in early evening yesterday

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI ?? Traders in the Standard Bank trading room yesterday when the rand touched R14 against the dollar.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI Traders in the Standard Bank trading room yesterday when the rand touched R14 against the dollar.
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