The Mercury

Long weekend impacts as SA stocks open on the back foot

- SIPHELELE DLUDLA siphelele.dludla@inl.co.za

SOUTH African stocks opened the week on the back foot yesterday after a long weekend as the signs of a fifth wave of the Covid-19 pandemic and rotational power cuts affected sentiment while expectatio­ns of aggressive monetary policy tightening in the US weakened the rand. The JSE All Share Index closed 1.5 percent lower at 71 339 points yesterday, dragged down by commodity-linked sectors and industrial firms.

At 3pm the resources index fell by 1.3 percent as the largest resources companies were trading in the red, and later in the day closed 0.42 percent lower at 76 871.77 points. The industrial index eased by 2.14 percent to 78 480.27 points at the close.

By 3pm Thungela Resources led the pack of losses as its share price shrank by 7.3 percent to R251.97 per share, followed by Exxaro Resources, which declined by 4.6 percent to R216.04 per share, while Sasol eased by 2.2 percent to R384.15 per share. However, later in the day these three shares marginally recovered.

There are fears that South Africa may be entering the fifth Covid-19 wave earlier than expected following a sustained rise in new infections over the past 14 days, driven by two sub-variants of the Omicron strain.

The Department of Health has also noted with concern the current spike in Covid-19 infections that appears to be driven by the BA.4 and BA.5 Omicron sub-variants. Another wave of Covid19 infections will likely spook fragile investors even though there’s currently no talk of any lockdown or any further Covid-19 restrictio­ns yet.

Eskom also implemente­d Stage 2 load shedding yesterday afternoon due to severe generation capacity constraint­s owing to delays in returning generators to service, as well as breakdowns of nine generators.

Meanwhile, the rand surprised on the up yesterday.

By 5pm the rand was bid at R15.81 against the dollar, 21c higher than on Friday at the correspond­ing time. This in spite of markets increasing­ly worrying that the US would hike its interest rates significan­tly more than South Africa in the second quarter.

Benguela Global Fund Managers’ portfolio manager Karl Gevers said the rand had been quite volatile yesterday, having began trading at around R16.08 to the greenback.

Gevers said the upcoming Federal Open Markets Committee meeting was expected to hike rates by at least 50 basis points to curb the historic high inflation in the US.

Investec chief economist Annabel Bishop said the rand had weakened 9 percent against the dollar since midApril, but more importantl­y, the markets also worry about the impact of a 2.5 percent US rate hike on future global growth.

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