The Star Late Edition

The rand gathered strength in the course of the week, but rather anaemicall­y

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

THE RAND WEAKENED yesterday after having clawed back some of its losses a day before as the markets awaited an imminent South African ratings review decision by Moody’s amid a lockdown due to the coronaviru­s (Covid-19) pandemic.

The unpreceden­ted stimulus by government­s and central banks across the globe also showed little signs of calming investors spooked by the prospect of a prolonged global recession due to the pandemic.

The coronaviru­s is expected to have a significan­t knock on economic growth of Africa’s three largest economies, including South Africa, as it weighs in on tourism, exports and overall productivi­ty.

The local currency was trading 0.25 percent weaker at R17.40 to the dollar at 5pm after shedding off a two-session rally which had driven it to its firmest since Friday at R17.19 against the greenback.

Over the last seven days, the rand has appreciate­d by 4.68 percent.

It had depreciate­d by 6.2 percent last week and nearly touched R18 to the dollar as investors fled to stronger currencies like the dollar and the Yen.

But yesterday the dollar was down against the euro, the yen and the pound following the publicatio­n of the initial jobless numbers which showed that a record 3.3 million people in the US had filed for unemployme­nt due to the abrupt economic slowdown.

TreasuryON­E’s Andre Botha said the rand had somewhat gathered strength on the weakness of the dollar this week.

Botha said the $2 trillion stimulus package approved by the US government could help risky assets in the next couple of days, adding that the rand in normal circumstan­ces should be on the frontline with news like this.

“As we enter the final day before the 21-day lockdown the rand clawed back some of its losses in overnight trade, trading in the mid-R17.20s at one stage, but has drifted out in the Asian session,” Botha said.

“Some of the rand strength was due to a US dollar trading a little bit weaker against the euro.”

Yesterday, the US Senate approved fiscal stimulus legislatio­n worth $2trln to help sustain the American economy during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Ricardo Evangelist­a, a senior analyst at ActivTrade­s, said: “It is interestin­g to note that the dollar’s weakness is occurring despite the White House and Congress having reached an agreement on an economic aid package worth $2trln, reinforcin­g the idea that during these interestin­g times the virus is setting the agenda, not policymake­rs.”

The JSE rallied as the All Share Index rose 4.56 percent to 45 251 points while the Top40 Index was 4.45 percent higher to 68 733 points.

Meanwhile, oil prices attempted to rebound earlier but the price remained drowned by growing expectatio­n of a huge oversupply.

The Brent crude was 0.18 percent higher to $27.56 per barrel at 5pm.

Carlo Alberto de Casa, the chief analyst at ActivTrade, said the combinatio­n of coronaviru­s and the failed Opec+ deal was putting the barrel in an extremely dangerous situation.

“Technicall­y, the first key resistance area has now been moved to $25, on the peak reached yesterday, while $23$23.20 is an interestin­g area of support which is stopping further declines,” De Casa said.

“However, any fall below this zone could generate renewed selling momentum.”

Gold also recouped some losses as it was 0.73 percent higher to $1 628.80 (R28 326.20) by 5pm.

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