Business Day

JSE lower in subdued trade

- Karl Gernetzky and Andrew Linder

The JSE closed lower on Friday in subdued trade as the US celebrated Thanksgivi­ng weekend.

Global investor attention remains on the US-China trade war, with markets waiting for a Chinese response to the US stance on pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong.

Earlier last week, US President Donald Trump signed a bill into law that provides for an annual review of Hong Kong’s trading relationsh­ip in a sign of support for the protesters, an issue that may provoke intransige­nce from Beijing during trade talks.

While the Hong Kong bill is providing poor optics, signing the deal into law was expected, said AxiTrader chief Asian market strategist Stephen Innes in a note.

It has, however, now left investors speculatin­g on the “resolute countermea­sures” China will take, and whether it will be enough to damage trade talks, he said.

The JSE all share fell 0.63% to 55,349 points and the top 40 0.76%. Platinum and gold miners fared best, adding 0.77% and 0.45%, respective­ly, while industrial­s lost 0.51%. Banks, which had a torrid week, lost 5.46% but recovered marginally, up 0.47%.

Sugar producer Tongaat Hulett said on Friday that it was engaging with authoritie­s and will be pursuing claims against 10 executives, after a PwC probe identified a number of undesirabl­e accounting practices. In June, Tongaat asked for its shares to be suspended after it was found that its financial results for the year to March 2018 could not be relied on.

The demerger and listing of Investec s asset management business place in London on March and Johannesbu­rg’will 13 2020, SAs largest take asset manager said earlier. Its shares fell 1.8% to R84.21.

Telkom said on Friday that SA’s third-largest mobile operator, Cell C, has rejected its takeover bid. Telkom shares jumped 3.9% to R46.89, with those of Blue Label Telecoms, the largest shareholde­r of Cell C, gaining 3.85% to R3.24.

Phumelela Gaming and Leisure was unchanged at R2.20, despite saying earlier it had the “worst year in its history” to end-July. It reported a headline loss of R98.2m versus headline earnings of R155.6m previously.

The rand was a little firmer in late trade, with US Thanksgivi­ng also having an effect on currency markets. At 5.51pm, it had gained 0.5% to R14.6286/$, 0.45% to R16.1163/€ and 0.45% to R18.8965/£. The euro was little changed at $1.1017.

The yield on the R2030 government bond was almost unchanged at 9.215%. Bond yields move inversely to their prices.

Gold was up 0.45% at $1,462.88/oz and platinum 0.98% to $901.15. Brent crude fell 3.26% to $61.24 a barrel.

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