Gulf News

Shock firing sends banking index sliding

Rand drops as much as 5.4% against the dollar after Zuma’s announceme­nt The shock move came less than a week after credit rating companies pushed the nation closer to junk status, citing concerns over a sluggish economy and rising debt as inflation and ra

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South Africa’s six-member banking index plummeted to levels not seen since the 2008 global financial crisis after President Jacob Zuma fired Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene.

The industry benchmark fell as much as 8.2 per cent and was 6 per cent weaker as of 10:32am in Johannesbu­rg. FirstRand Ltd., Africa’s largest bank by market value, tumbled as much as 10 per cent, while Standard Bank Group Ltd., the biggest by assets, fell 9.1 per cent. Barclays Plc’s South African unit dropped 9.2 per cent and Nedbank Group Ltd. retreated 6.9 per cent.

“All the banks are built on confidence — removing the finance minister isn’t good for the country’s confidence,” said Patrice Rassou, head of equities at Sanlam Investment Management in Cape Town, which oversees about $30 billion (Dh110 billion) in assets.

Zuma late Wednesday removed Nene from his post after 19 months, without giving any reasons except to say that he would be switched to another key role. His replacemen­t is David van Rooyen, a lawmaker who is little known to locals or investors. The rand dropped as much as 5.4 per cent against the dollar after Zuma’s announceme­nt, the biggest decline since September 2011, hitting a record low of 15.3857.

The shock move came less than a week after credit rating companies pushed the nation closer to junk status, citing concerns over a sluggish economy and rising debt as inflation and interest rates climb. Mining and manufactur­ing are already under strain because of plunging metal prices and power constraint­s.

“A debt downgrade would also lead to increasing funding costs which is not good for banks, corporate South Africa and the man on the street who is already over indebted,” Sanlam’s Rassou said.

Other financial services companies also felt the impact, with Johannesbu­rg’s benchmark life assurance index down 4.5 per cent. Sanlam Ltd, the largest South African-based life assurer, plunged 7.8 per cent, the biggest drop since October 2008. Old Mutual Plc, which relies on South Africa for more than half its profit, slid as much as 3.6 per cent, the most in more than a month.

Impairment worries

Investors may be concerned that the risk of increased impairment­s for bad debt is increasing, said David Shapiro, a director at Johannesbu­rg-based money manager Sasfin Securities. “Are the banks lending to an economy that perhaps can’t handle it?” he said by phone. “You’d expect rising debt levels as inflation surges.”

The sell-off in banks could be a sign that foreign investors are pulling funds out of the South African market, Shapiro said. “They are being used as punching bags,” he said. “The banks are the ones lending to the manufactur­ers and miners.”

Investec Ltd fell as much as 2.6 per cent, while Capitec Bank Holdings Ltd, which provides unsecured loans, dropped as much as 7.3 per cent.

Rene van Wyk, the head of bank regulation in South Africa at the central bank, declined to speak about the plunge in the lenders’ stocks when called at his office in the capital, Pretoria. He referred questions to the central bank’s media department.

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