Business and Technology

Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene’s crisis drags rand

Stocks dipped to their lowest since early March led by gold and banks shares, tracking the weaker currency. The rand weakened more than 1 per cent on Monday as a newspaper report that Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene had asked President Cyril Ramaphosa to sack him rocked the currency.

At 5 pm the rand was bid 10c weaker at R14.87 against the dollar, having hit a session low of R14.99 in early trade after the Nene story broke. Ramaphosa’s spokesperson told Reuters his office was not aware of Nene’s request.

Last week Nene told an inquiry into government corruption he had made numerous visits to the Gupta family, friends of former leader Jacob Zuma accused of unfairly winning state contracts and influencing the firing of ministers. Both Zuma and the Guptas have denied any wrongdoing. Nene is due to reading the mid-term budget later this month.

Nhlanhla Nene

Investor sentiment

Moody’s is set to review its rating on Friday, and Nene’s departure risks rattling fragile investor sentiment towards an economy in recession. “The initial selling reaction on the rand on reports that its finance minister has asked to be sacked will encourage investor caution that South Africa could be in store for another round of political risk,” said Jameel Ahmad, head of the currency strategy at FXTM.

South Africa has had three finance ministers in the last two years, with rand and bonds reacting badly to the upheavals. Bonds also slumped, with the yield on the benchmark paper due in 2026 up 6 basis points to 9.3 per cent.

On the bourse, the all share index fell 0.35 per cent to 54 219 points while the blue-chip Top40 index fell 0.45 per cent 48 042 points. Banks were down 0.44 per cent and the gold index fell 1.07 per cent to R1 032.

MTN bucked the trend, rising 2.6 per cent after the Nigerian central bank said it might reduce the amount it had ordered the telecoms firm to repatriate. “We continue to be affected by the US policy decisions and locally, the weakened rand and political uncertainty continue to weigh on local stocks,” said Ferdi Heyneke, portfolio manager at Afrifocus Securities.

Gold fell partly on the back of gains in the dollar which is benefiting from a run of strong U.S. economic data reinforcing expectations of further interest rate rises.

Source: IOL News