Business Day

Industrial­s and banks weigh on JSE

- Maarten Mittner Markets Writer

The JSE closed weaker on Monday in global risk-off trade as the Dow opened weaker and European markets closed in the red on global trade war concerns.

The European automotive sector has been hard hit after President Donald Trump reiterated his threat to impose tariffs on European vehicles, despite opposition from US legislator­s and domestic and foreign vehicle makers. Trade is expected to be prominent on the agenda when European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker visits the White House on Wednesday.

Markets have see-sawed in recent months as investors reacted to heightened rhetoric on trade and the imposi- tion of US tariffs and retaliator­y measures from China and Europe, Dow Jones Newswires reported.

The trade-related sell-offs were driven more by sentiment than fundamenta­ls, said Patrick Spencer, Baird vice-chairman of equities. Even though tariffs made up a fraction of world GDP, the concern was that “firms will stop spending because they don’t know what’s going to happen.”

Over the weekend, Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers ended a meeting with little progress on resolving global trade tension.

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said “it’s definitely a realistic possibilit­y” that Trump would follow through with his threat to impose tariffs on $500bn of Chinese goods.

The all share ended the day 0.76% lower at 56,556.80 points and the top 40 lost 0.83%. Industrial­s shed 1.29%, banks 1.04%, food and drug retailers 0.85% and general retailers 0.55%. The gold index lifted 0.52%.

Sasol rose 0.43% to R505. Richemont lost 1.14% to R117.48. Steinhoff Internatio­nal fell 14.24% to R2.77.

Naspers closed 1.68% lower at R3,390.61 amid renewed criticism levelled against the group after it was disclosed that CEO Bob van Dijk had received a share bonanza of R1.6bn. Nepi Rockcastle rose 1.47% to R118.02.

The rand was about 0.8% weaker at R13.53/$.

Bonds tracked the weaker rand with the R186 last bid at 8.765% from 8.715%.

The top 40 Alsi futures index dropped 1.09% to 50,430 points. The number of contracts traded was 16,408 from Friday’s 20,289.

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