Cape Times

STOCKS AND MARKETS

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SOUTH African stocks are about to round off their strongest quarter in almost two decades, and the influence of the coronaviru­s pandemic is clear to see in the shares most responsibl­e for driving the market higher.

The JSE all share index has climbed 22 percent since the start of April, its best performanc­e over any quarter since 2001. Emerging-market stocks, heading for their biggest gains since 2010, are up 17 percent.

South Africa’s benchmark ranks eighth over the period among 93 major global indexes tracked by Bloomberg as of Monday’s close. It’s within 5.2 percent of erasing 2020’s losses.

AngloGold Ashanti and Gold Fields are among the leading index-point contributo­rs to the gains as the uncertain times push traders towards the haven of bullion.

Tech investor Naspers has prospered as the Covid-19 lockdown strengthen­ed the hand of partly owned Chinese online giant Tencent Holdings, spurring it to record highs in Hong Kong.

Mining behemoth Anglo American has benefited as central bankers around the world release massive stimulus to revive battered economies.

“If the global economy continues to recover, combined with the money printing that is happening and with central banks cutting interest rates in most markets, there is a lot of stimulus that should support higher valuations,” said Peter Takaendesa, the head of equities at Mergence Investment Managers in Cape Town.

Sasol has outpaced all other gainers over the quarter, jumping almost fourfold as some investors bet that asset sales, cost-cutting measures and recovering oil prices will reduce the need for a painful rights offering by the fuels and chemicals producer.

Sasol has also been among stocks to benefit from buying by first-time mom-and-pop traders who, with an unpreceden­ted amount of time on their hands during the national lockdown, were lured to the market by beaten-down valuations.

“We have seen an increase in appetite for stock broking-type accounts, where people have discretion to purchase shares like Sasol,” according to Renzi Thirumalai, the head of investment­s at FNB Wealth and Investment­s. “Quite a few shares were at depressed levels, so there were a lot of opportunit­ies there.”

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