Johannesburg - The JSE extended its losses in
midday trade on Friday, tracking negative global sentiment amid the euro
area debt worries.
However, local construction shares rallied on the back of the infrastructure plan outlined in the state of the nation speech last night.
At 12:04 local time, the JSE All Share [JSE:J203] index was down 0.68% to 34 036.53 points, with the resource counters sliding 1.34%; the gold index dipped 0.51% and platinum shares lost 1.27%.
Industrials edged down 0.23%, financials shaved off 0.53%, and banks shed 0.75%.
The rand was weaker at 7.67 to the US dollar, from 7.58 at the JSE's close on Thursday. Gold was quoted at $1 719.79 a troy ounce from $1 749.30/oz at the JSE's previous close, while platinum was at $1 649/oz, from $1 669/oz before.
"Foreigners continue to sell shares and bonds, which is reflected in the rand/dollar weakness. Greece's debt trouble remains the catalyst," said Graham Ledbitter, portfolio manager at BoE Private Clients Services.
Basil Read Holdings (BSR) led the construction index, rallying nearly 4% after President Jacob Zuma unveiled an infrastructure development drive.
The first project is a plan to develop and integrate rail, road and water infrastructure, centred around two main areas in Limpopo: the Waterberg in the Western part of the province and Steelpoort in the eastern part.
This is intended to unlock the mineral belt of coal, platinum, palladium, chrome and other minerals, in order to facilitate increased mining as well as stepped-up beneficiation of minerals.
"Using the developments in Limpopo as a base, we will expand rail transport in Mpumalanga, connecting coalfields to power stations," the president said.
The second project will be to improve the movement of goods and economic integration through a Durban-Free State-Gauteng logistics and industrial corridor.
"We saw the same sort of rally in these shares just before the 2010 Soccer World Cup. This is a big boost for the sector," said Nick Kunze, head of dealing at BJM Private Clients Services.
Zuma praised Transnet's market demand strategy that entails investments of over more than R300 billion over the next three years.
European stock markets fell on Friday after eurozone chiefs withheld approval for a second Greek bailout and demanded fresh proof from Greece's political leaders that they were ready to deliver on past and new pledges, Dow Jones Newswires reports.
Eurozone finance ministers said Greece's parliament must approve new austerity policies and a package of economic overhauls before the eurozone can back a EUR130 billion loan deal for the government.
London's FTSE 100 fell 0.24% to 5,881.39 points at noon, local time.
Most Asian markets closed lower on Friday, with Japan's Nikkei Stock Average shedding 0.61% to 8,947.17 points, while China's Shanghai Composite rose 0.1% to 2,351.98 points.
However, local construction shares rallied on the back of the infrastructure plan outlined in the state of the nation speech last night.
At 12:04 local time, the JSE All Share [JSE:J203] index was down 0.68% to 34 036.53 points, with the resource counters sliding 1.34%; the gold index dipped 0.51% and platinum shares lost 1.27%.
Industrials edged down 0.23%, financials shaved off 0.53%, and banks shed 0.75%.
The rand was weaker at 7.67 to the US dollar, from 7.58 at the JSE's close on Thursday. Gold was quoted at $1 719.79 a troy ounce from $1 749.30/oz at the JSE's previous close, while platinum was at $1 649/oz, from $1 669/oz before.
"Foreigners continue to sell shares and bonds, which is reflected in the rand/dollar weakness. Greece's debt trouble remains the catalyst," said Graham Ledbitter, portfolio manager at BoE Private Clients Services.
Basil Read Holdings (BSR) led the construction index, rallying nearly 4% after President Jacob Zuma unveiled an infrastructure development drive.
The first project is a plan to develop and integrate rail, road and water infrastructure, centred around two main areas in Limpopo: the Waterberg in the Western part of the province and Steelpoort in the eastern part.
This is intended to unlock the mineral belt of coal, platinum, palladium, chrome and other minerals, in order to facilitate increased mining as well as stepped-up beneficiation of minerals.
"Using the developments in Limpopo as a base, we will expand rail transport in Mpumalanga, connecting coalfields to power stations," the president said.
The second project will be to improve the movement of goods and economic integration through a Durban-Free State-Gauteng logistics and industrial corridor.
"We saw the same sort of rally in these shares just before the 2010 Soccer World Cup. This is a big boost for the sector," said Nick Kunze, head of dealing at BJM Private Clients Services.
Zuma praised Transnet's market demand strategy that entails investments of over more than R300 billion over the next three years.
European stock markets fell on Friday after eurozone chiefs withheld approval for a second Greek bailout and demanded fresh proof from Greece's political leaders that they were ready to deliver on past and new pledges, Dow Jones Newswires reports.
Eurozone finance ministers said Greece's parliament must approve new austerity policies and a package of economic overhauls before the eurozone can back a EUR130 billion loan deal for the government.
London's FTSE 100 fell 0.24% to 5,881.39 points at noon, local time.
Most Asian markets closed lower on Friday, with Japan's Nikkei Stock Average shedding 0.61% to 8,947.17 points, while China's Shanghai Composite rose 0.1% to 2,351.98 points.