Business Day

JSE gains for fifth week in a row

- Karl Gernetzky Markets Writer gernetzkyk@businessli­ve.co.za

The JSE closed higher on Friday, its fifth consecutiv­e week of gains, with miners once again largely responsibl­e for keeping the local bourse positive. Precious metal miners were under pressure, but diversifie­d miners gained, continuing to benefit from a rising oil price.

The JSE closed higher on Friday, its fifth consecutiv­e week of gains, with miners once again largely responsibl­e for keeping the local bourse positive.

Precious metal miners were under pressure, but diversifie­d miners gained, continuing to benefit from a rising oil price. Oil has pushed to a five-month high and gained steadily last week amid an escalating armed conflict in Libya.

The JSE started Friday little changed but pushed higher along with global markets after eurozone data came in better than expected. Industrial production in March contracted only 0.2% year on year, versus the market consensus of a fall of 0.6%.

The all share firmed 0.38% to 58,405.3 points, with the top 40 rising by the same margin.

Industrial­s added 0.61%, resources 0.45%, and food and drug retailers 1.7%. Gold miners fell 0.94%.

The all share added 1.09% for the week and is now up 10.75% in 2019.

Richemont gained 1.13% to R101.27, but was down 0.88% for the week. On Wednesday, Credit Suisse warned that it believes the company’s share price is overvalued, as the market underestim­ated the amount of cash needed for its business operations.

EOH added 1.6% to R11.40. Earlier it warned that it expected to swing into a headline loss for the six months to end-January, hit by various impairment­s of its assets. It is expected to release its results on Tuesday, having delayed them in February, citing a need to conduct a strategic review.

Brimstone slipped 2.63% to R9.25. It confirmed it is exiting a consortium seeking to acquire Clover, SA’s largest dairy producer. The deal has been criticised by lobby groups due to the participat­ion of an Israeli company. Naspers added 0.42% to R3,590. Diversifie­d miner Glencore gained 2.05% to R60.36, Anglo American 0.49% to R402.32, and BHP 0.33% to R351.79. Exxaro added 2.09% to R174.98 and Sasol 0.93% to R466.62.

Shoprite gained 3.24% to R175.99 and Spar 1.69% to R201.73, while Pepkor fell 1.35% to R18.94.

Shortly after the JSE closed, the Dow was up 0.73% to 26,331.24 points, the FTSE 100 had gained 0.26%, the CAC 40 0.34% and the DAX 30 0.55%. Gold and platinum were both flat, with the former at $1,292.24/oz and the latter at $892.41. Brent crude was up 0.75% to $71.47 a barrel.

At the same time the rand had gained 0.48% to the dollar at R13.9407, while the benchmark R186 government bond was bid at 8.48% from 8.475% previously.

The global focus this week is expected to be on the US corporate earnings season, while trade war issues continue to threaten volatility. The US and China appear to be edging towards a deal, analysts said, but the US is threatenin­g to levy tariffs on $11bn worth of EU goods.

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