The Star Early Edition

JSE’s all share index in 60 000 points mark first

Early trade sees figures unpreceden­ted in almost 130-year bourse history

- Kabelo Khumalo

THE WEAKENING rand and bullish performanc­e from gold mining and resources stocks yesterday pushed the JSE’s all share index above the 60 000 points mark for the first time in the bourse’s nearly 130-year history.

The index reached the record high of 60 140.33 points before settling at 59 975.67 points by 5pm as the rand hedges pulled the market higher.

The all-share index was swiftly followed by the benchmark top 40 index, which also hit a record 53 740.77 points before correcting to 53 563.68 points at the close of business yesterday.

The stock market has been on an upward trend since the second half of the year, with the all-share index flirting with the elusive 60 000 mark for most of October on the back of resources which had a strong run last month, returning 7 percent on the back of a 22 percent rebound in platinum miners and an 8 percent gain by the general miners.

Dave Mohr, chief investment strategist at Old Mutual Multi-Managers, said October was a very strong month for local equities, despite elevated political uncertaint­y following another cabinet reshuffle and a disappoint­ing Medium-Term Budget.

“The FTSE/JSE All Share Index followed global markets higher and benefited from a weak rand, returning 6.3 percent in October. Returns for the first 10 months of the year is a very solid 19.6 percent including dividends,” Mohr said.

“The strong local equity returns came entirely from large caps, in other words from the big global companies on the JSE, including Naspers, but also Richemont, British American Tobacco and Anglo American. The Top 40 Index has returned 22 percent in 2017, but the Small-Cap Index only 1.8 percent while the Mid-Cap Index was flat.”

Volatile

The bullion added 1.93 percent while resources stocks continued their winning streak rising to 1.92 percent on the day.

The surge in the highly volatile resources sector was led by Kumba Iron Ore, which surged 2.77 percent, while Exxarro was up 2.07 percent and Glencore inched up 0.16 percent.

The heavy lifting in gold mining stocks was led by AngloGold Ashanti which was up 3.22 percent on the day, followed by Anglo American, which rose 2.68 percent, Harmony Gold with 1.51 percent gloss to its share price and Sibanye Gold which inched up 1.38 percent.

The local stock market also benefited from a rand which weakened nearly 2 percent against the greenback and was bid at R14.1883 at 5pm, with the local currency continuing its losing streak in the wake of the disappoint­ing MediumTerm Budget Policy Statement.

The greenback continued to garner support on the day as optimism around the proposed tax reform gains momentum, and President Trump’s choice of Jerome Powell to succeed Janet Yellen as Fed chairperso­n continued to receive favour from the markets.

The rand’s weakness was further highlighte­d by Friday’s Turkish inflation number, which came in at a nineyear high of 11.9 percent, much higher than the expectatio­ns. T

The Turkish lira weakened significan­tly and with it, the rand and other emerging market currencies.

Tiffany Pollock, a forex and money market trader at Merchant West, described the rand as a serial offender in mismanagin­g fiscus.

“The key resistance level of R14.35 to the dollar should be retested soon, a break of which may materialis­e in another leg higher to target R14.47 before the value propositio­n reasserts itself again.

“Bond outflows through October topped R10bn and nearly R3bn has exited so far, suggesting the positional readjustme­nt for the country’s more realistic fiscal position and conservati­ve Sarb is ongoing,” Pollock said.

 ?? PHOTO: TIMOTHY BERNARD ?? Mashudu Malema browses the Bloomberg terminal, eyeing the record leap in the all share index.
PHOTO: TIMOTHY BERNARD Mashudu Malema browses the Bloomberg terminal, eyeing the record leap in the all share index.

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