The Mercury

Nedbank flags unstable coalitions, Trump victory as major risk events to confidence

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

NEDBANK has flagged an unstable coalition government that would undo the current framework on PublicPriv­ate Participat­ion (PPP) post the May 29 election, as well as the possible election of Donald Trump as US President in November, as two major risk events to investor confidence.

This comes as surveys and analysts continue to forecast the ruling ANC’s loss of majority support at the polls, which would force the governing party to seek support from minority parties to form a government.

Nedbank Group senior economist Isaac Matshego yesterday said President Cyril Ramaphosa’s administra­tion had done so much to restore investor confidence by shifting towards a partnershi­p between the public and private sectors.

Among others, Matshego highlighte­d a strong investment in renewable energy by the private sector, new Transnet management, and the awarding of the Durban Pier 2 container terminal to a private company, as “policy shifters” that had moved the needle to unlock investment.

He said the government’s capacity to borrow more from the markets had been significan­tly decreased as a result of rising interest payment costs every year, and the government alone could not carry the cost of public infrastruc­ture spend.

“So with this election, what I’m going to watch out for is whether the incoming government will be the one which will likely shift away from that policy stance. Because we face all these infrastruc­ture developmen­t challenges, the backlogs, and government finances are tight,” Matshego said.

“So we need to mobilise private sector funds from the internal fund industry. We talked to these fund managers, and these guys are saying ‘we want to invest in infrastruc­ture assets’.

“Number one, we need an appropriat­e, favourable legislativ­e framework for private sector investment­s in public infrastruc­ture. Number two is risk management. We need to take that Sanral model of roads and just replicate it in other sectors in electricit­y, in water, in the rail and in the ports (sector).”

Matshego said the election outcome was bringing a lot of uncertaint­y for investors, and there had been a slow implementa­tion of structural reforms, while corruption and mismanagem­ent continued to prevail.

Matshego was speaking at the Nedgroup’s Pre-election Treasurers’ Roundtable event in Johannesbu­rg.

Independen­t political analyst JP Landman had painted a number of possible different May 29 election outcome scenarios, saying that a DA-ANC coalition government would be most preferable as an EFF-ANC coalition would hurt confidence.

“The ANC itself now is moving to what I would call a developmen­tal State to developmen­t through the private sector. It’s a little bit of a different mindset, but a very important shift that’s taking place in our country,” Landman said.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa