“The rand and other emerging-market currencies have fallen victim to
contagion after the Turkish lira sold off to record lows,”
Zaakirah Ismail, an analyst at Standard Bank Group in Johannesburg,
said in a client note. “We remain wary of recurring rand weakness
because of the pervasive uncertainty affecting risk sentiment.”
The rand, which slumped as much as 9.4% during early trading
hours when liquidity is thin, was 2.3% weaker at R14.4209 by 12:43 in Johannesburg. It has dropped 7.6% in the past four
trading sessions.
The MSCI Emerging Markets Currency
Index fell to the lowest in over a year after Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan showed no signs of backing down in a standoff with the
US administration. Traders are cutting their holdings of
developing-nation assets on concern Turkey is sliding toward a
full-blown financial crisis.
As the Turkish crisis worsened, foreign investors dumped a net R5.16bn of South African rand bonds on Friday, the
most in two months and bringing net outflows for the week to R6.45bn, according to JSE data. That’s putting pressure on the
rand as South Africa needs portfolio inflows to finance a
current-account deficit, which widened to 4.8% of gross domestic
product in the first quarter.
The rand’s
expected price swing against the dollar over the next month, based on
prices of options to buy and sell the currency, jumped 4.85 percentage
points on Monday to 23.45%. The
premium of options to sell the currency over those to buy it, known as
the 35 Delta risk reversal, climbed 40 basis points to 3.7 percentage
points, the most since April 2017.
Yields on benchmark 2026 government bonds climbed 22 basis point to
9.07% after rising 18 basis points on Friday. Yields on
dollar debt due 2028 rose 13 basis points to 5.87%.
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