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Top Forecaster Sees More Pain for Rand

Top Forecaster Sees More Pain for Rand

(Bloomberg) -- The rand’s comeback against the dollar this month will run out of steam as U.S. rates rise and the trade war between the world’s two biggest economies weighs on global growth, according to the most-accurate forecaster of the South African currency.

The rand has gained 2.2 percent against the greenback since the beginning of July to around 13.39 per dollar on Tuesday. Any further advance should be seen as a dollar-buying opportunity, according to Rabobank, which tops Bloomberg’s latest ranking for rand-dollar forecasters and predicts the South African currency will end this quarter at 14.20, a slide of about 6 percent.

“The rand is under renewed selling pressure amid fading positive market sentiment,” said Rabobank’s London-based emerging-markets currency strategist Piotr Matys, whose forecast for the currency is more bearish than the median of 13.46 in a Bloomberg survey. “The prospect of a full-scale trade war remains the main risk factor for the rand and its peers.”

Top Forecaster Sees More Pain for Rand

South Africa’s currency slumped 14 percent in the second quarter amid a sell-off of emerging-market assets, with foreigners deserting the country’s bond market at a record pace. That’s making it more difficult for President Cyril Ramaphosa, who replaced the scandal-tainted Jacob Zuma in February, to deliver on promises of attracting investment and stimulating growth in Africa’s most-industrialized economy.

While central banks from Argentina to Turkey have tightened policy to support their currencies, South Africa’s Reserve Bank stayed put after cutting its benchmark in March to 6.5 percent. That narrowed the differential over the U.S. policy rate to the lowest in 11 years, reducing the relative attractiveness of South African assets. Bond and equity outflows may accelerate as the Federal Reserve continues to hike, Matys said.

Top Forecaster Sees More Pain for Rand

Foreign investors have sold a net 36.5 billion rand ($2.7 billion) in the year through July 6, according to Johannesburg Stock Exchange Data. The rand weakened 0.9 percent to 13.4534 per dollar by 3:53 p.m. in Johannesburg.

‘Vicious Cycle’

Tit-for-tat tariffs between the U.S. and China have also hit the the rand and other South African assets. The nation’s reliance on raw-material exports makes it particularly vulnerable to any slowdown in global growth due to a trade war. The Bloomberg Commodity Index has plunged 11 percent in the past month as prices of metals including copper, gold and platinum fell.

“The vicious cycle may still accelerate in the second half of the year, which would have serious negative consequences for emerging markets,” Matys said.

For the rand, much will depend on Ramaphosa’s ability to implement his reform agenda, Matys said. Among his immediate challenges are keeping populist elements within his party at bay and investors happy while crafting agreements on land reform and ownership of mines.

He also has to consolidate public debt and root out mismanagement at state-owned companies including Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd. But the credibility of South African institutions gives it a head start over Turkey, where President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s latest power grab is spooking investors, Matys said.

“At least South Africa has credible policy makers, led by President Ramaphosa, who are fully committed to implement structural reforms, which cannot be said about Turkey,” he said.

--With assistance from Wei Lu.

To contact the reporter on this story: Colleen Goko in Johannesburg at cgoko2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dana El Baltaji at delbaltaji@bloomberg.net, Robert Brand

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