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Foreign Exodus Has Barely Budged South Africa's Rand. Here's Why

Foreign Exodus Has Barely Budged South Africa's Rand. Here's Why

(Bloomberg) -- As foreign investors dumped South African bonds and equities in the past two weeks at a rate last seen in 2016, the rand didn’t seem to notice.

South Africa depends on portfolio flows to finance a persistent current-account deficit, and with more than 50 percent of domestic fixed-rate debt in the hands of foreign investors, any reversal should put pressure on the rand - or so the argument goes. But as outflows mounted, reaching $2.2 billion in the 10 days through Wednesday, the currency gained 1.2 percent against the dollar.

Foreign Exodus Has Barely Budged South Africa's Rand. Here's Why

The last time South Africa saw a similar scale of outflows in a two-week period, in October 2016, the rand weakened 5 percent. What’s different this time? The political outlook under new President Cyril Ramaphosa, suggests Henrik Gullberg, the London-based executive director of emerging-market trading strategy at Nomura International Plc.

It’s “somewhat strange” that the rand would strengthen “and would suggest there must be some other inflows not captured in the daily bond and equity flows data,” Gullberg said. “That, and the rand’s relative resilience over the past few weeks compared with peer currencies, would suggest there is still belief in the ability of Ramaphosa to implement change, albeit very gradually.”

The rand’s gain in the midst of an emerging-market selloff sparked by rising U.S. rates and a strengthening dollar shows there is more to the rand than portfolio flows, said Alvin Chawasema, a fixed-income trader at Sasfin Securities Ltd. in Johannesburg. Slowing inflation and a favorable interest-rate differential with developing nations also supported the currency, he said.

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, John Viljoen

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.