ADVERTISEMENT

Deficit Seen Widest Since WWI Weighs on South African Bonds

Deficit Seen Widest Since WWI Weighing on South African Bonds

South African government bond yields are climbing ahead of this week’s adjusted budget as investors contemplate what could be the widest fiscal deficit since World War I.

The country is already borrowing at a rate of more than 1 billion rand ($57 million) a day, but even that may not be enough to plug a hole in government finances of as much as 15% of gross domestic product, according to Investec Ltd. Debt levels will exceed 100% of gross domestic product in 2025 and rise to almost 114% before the end of the decade, according to government projections.

Finance Minister Tito Mboweni warned of deep spending cuts when he presents the adjusted budget on Wednesday, but investors are also concerned about an increase in borrowing. While weekly debt sales -- now totaling 7.5 billion rand in nominal and inflation-linked securities -- remain oversubscribed, the local market doesn’t have infinite capacity to absorb fresh issuance, according to Anchor Capital.

“In the short term, the government will have no choice but to live on debt,” said Nolan Wapenaar, chief investment officer at Cape Town-based Anchor, which oversees about 60 billion rand. “However, its current pace of borrowing is not sustainable and even our domestic market will, at some point, battle to finance government at the current pace of bond issuance.”

Deficit Seen Widest Since WWI Weighs on South African Bonds

Yields on benchmark 10-year rand notes have climbed 67 basis points from a one-year low on June 3 to 9.3% on Monday, the highest among major emerging markets monitored by Bloomberg. That makes South African bonds the worst performers in the period, with a negative return of 7% compared with an average loss of 0.6% among developing nations.

The adjustment budget Mboweni is preparing will redirect 130 billion rand of spending to the 500 billion-rand coronavirus stimulus package President Cyril Ramaphosa announced in April. The fiscal deficit is likely to exceed 10% of GDP in the fiscal year through March 2021, according to the Reserve Bank. The largest gap on record was 11.6% of GDP in 1914, followed by 10.4% in 1940.

With the economy set to contract by about 7% this year, tax revenue may fall as much as 300 billion rand short of the estimate given in February, according to Standard Bank Group Ltd. The Treasury plans to make “very serious and unusual changes” to its expenditure plans, Mboweni told lawmakers on Thursday.

“Bond yields will be the yardstick against which we can measure both his performance and South Africa’s prospects as a country,” said Anchor’s Wapenaar.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.