Business Day

Markets thrown into disarray

- Andries Mahlangu and Andrew Linder

Global risk aversion was the order of the day on Thursday, resulting in both the rand and the JSE coming under substantia­l pressure.

Just days after Chinese and US leaders agreed to put a moratorium on their months-long trade battle, Canada arrested Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou. She faces possible extraditio­n to the US on charges of breaking sanctions against Iran. China has called for her immediate release.

GOVERNMENT BOND

The arrest has created uncertaint­y over the agreement reached at the weekend between US President Donald Trump and Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping.

By 6.13pm the rand had lost 2.24% to the dollar, at R14.1505, while the benchmark R186 government bond weakened to 9.05%, from Wednesday’s close of 8.96%. Against the euro, the rand had fallen 2.69% to R16.1309 and 2.75% to the pound to R18.1181. The euro was at $1.1365 from $1.1345.

Earlier, data from the Reserve Bank showed that SA’s current account deficit had worsened to 3.35% of GDP in the third quarter from 3.4% previously. Analysts said the number was expected and had little effect on local markets, with the China-US concern the big news of the day.

“What these [current account] numbers tell us is that SA’s vulnerabil­ity to external factors has increased, though not significan­tly.

“We are still relying on external sources of funding to balance our books,” ETM Analytics market analyst Halen Bothma said.

The JSE all share closed 1.75% weaker, with banks and financials the biggest losers, down 3% and 2.29%, respective­ly. Industrial­s fell 2.08%. Platinum and gold miners made good gains in the risk-off environmen­t.

FirstRand fell 3% to R65.25, Standard Bank 3.29% to R172.80, Absa 3.36% to R154.14 and Nedbank 3.14% to end at R257.87.

Among financials, Old Mutual was the biggest loser, slumping 4.9% to R21.35, while Sanlam relinquish­ed 3.05% to R74.50.

Bidvest lost 4.02% to R201.50 and Imperial Logistics 3.28% to R62.19.

Asian markets fell in the morning on the news of Meng’s arrest. This was followed by a tumble in European and US bourses. The Dow, the FTSE 100, the CAC 40 and the DAX 30 had all lost upwards of 3% by 6.45pm local time on Thursday.

Brent crude was not spared from the global market rout as oil cartel Opec’s summit got under way in Vienna. Brent crude slid 4.39% to $58.99 a barrel in early afternoon trade amid reports that major oil producers were struggling to reach a deal to reduce output. It remained at similar levels into the evening.

Platinum gave up 1.47% to R$786.81/oz while gold managed to eke out a 0.33% gain to $1,237.

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