Cape Times

Investor sentiment on about-turn helps SA local stocks to rally

- BANELE GININDZA banele.ginindza@inl.co.za

FIRMS stockpilin­g on precious metals and minerals as well as growing expectatio­ns of China injecting a stimulus package to ease the industrial effects of the coronaviru­s outbreak put investor sentiment on an about-turn that helped local stocks rally sharply from the Tuesday losses after foreigners sold $4.45 billion (R66.85bn) worth of shares, leading to the biggest net outflow since November.

Mining stocks benefited from the market’s largesse with Impala gaining 4.46 percent to R170.90, AngloGold 5.24 percent to R31.49, Gold Fields 9.57 percent to R10.60 and DRDGold 6.06 percent to R10.50.

Platinum miners also inched up, with Amplats leading the rally 6.72 percent to R139.56, while Northam inched up 7.93 percent to R148.82, Harmony 9.28 percent to R53.45, Royal Bafokeng 6.05 percent to R59.81, and African Rainbow Minerals 2.28 percent to R168.50.

Analysts said the upswing was as a result of the sharp turn in gold which broke the $1 600 (R24 037) an ounce barrier, and palladium prices were up 6 percent to $2 785 an ounce, which saw both sub indexes rise to the highest level in nine years.

The sub index of gold producers was up 4.4 percent to the highest level since December 2011, while the sub-index for platinum producers rose 5.9 percent to the highest since April 2011

Palladium and rhodium prices, widely used in vehicle exhausts to reduce harmful emissions, have climbed as tighter environmen­tal regulation­s force carmakers to buy more of the precious metals.

FXTM Market Analyst Han Tan said Covid-19 was set to frame the market action and policymake­rs’ reactions around the world over the near-term.

“The global economic outlook remains mired in uncertaint­y at this point in time, with coronaviru­s-related warnings emanating out of corporate America, the Eurozone economy, and Asian government­s. In the interim, Asian currencies are expected to hold a bias for more softness so as to help ease some of the pressures off the respective economies,” he said.

Standard Bank rose 0.8 percent to R167.64, FirstRand 0.73 percent to R62.20, Absa 0.89 percent to R146.64, and Nedbank 0.61 percent to R146.64.

The JSE Top40 index rose 0.33 percent to 52 092.14 points from Tuesday’s 0.83 percent loss to 51 922 points, while the broader all-share index gained 0.27 percent to 57 868.12 points, shaking off Tuesday’s 0.81 percent loss to 57 714 points.

Tan said the rally in gold prices and investors’ increase of exposure to safe haven assets amid swirling concerns over the Covid-19 outbreak “shows more headroom for bullion before it breaks into overbought territory, which could see bullion bulls testing the $1 610 handle as long as markets persist with the risk-off mode.”

The gauge of mining stocks advanced 1.5 percent to the highest in four weeks as gold and platinum producers climbed to multi-year peaks.

“There is a lot of stock market money looking for a safe haven and finding it in gold. One keeps thinking there must be a top somewhere, but I don’t think we have found it yet,” said David Govett, head of precious metals trading at Marex Spectron Group in London.

 ?? Reuters ?? MOLTEN gold flows out of a smelter into a mould of a one kilogram bar at a plant of gold refiner in this file picture. | ARND WIEGMANN
Reuters MOLTEN gold flows out of a smelter into a mould of a one kilogram bar at a plant of gold refiner in this file picture. | ARND WIEGMANN
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