Rand slips as Ramaphosa’s weekend battle with the ANC pulls focus
South Africa’s rand weakened after President Cyril Ramaphosa had to stave off a leadership challenge from party rivals opposed to his efforts to curb corruption and implement economic reforms.
The rand slipped as much as 0.9%, leading emerging-market currency declines against the dollar. Implied volatility jumped the most in almost a month, suggesting options traders anticipate wider swings in coming weeks.
South Africa’s government is battling to revive an economy that was mired in recession before the coronavirus outbreak and which the Treasury expects to contract more than 7% this year.
Ramaphosa’s efforts to stem corruption have been undermined by a faction of the ruling African National Congress that’s backed by his predecessor Jacob Zuma, who was ousted in 2018 amid allegations of graft.
“South Africa is facing a particularly bleak second-quarter GDP and unemployment outcome, and ongoing opposition to the necessary reforms to achieve a strong, persistent economic recovery is weighing on the domestic currency,” said Annabel Bishop, the Johannesburg-based chief economist at Investec Bank Ltd.
“A continued weak economic growth environment will enforce further credit-rating downgrades and weaken the rand.”
South Africa lost its last investment-grade credit rating when Moody’s Investors Service downgraded its assessment in March. That added fuel to a selloff of the country’s bonds, with net outflows reaching a record 59 billion rand ($3.5 billion) on Aug. 28.
The rand was 0.7% weaker at 16.7138 per dollar by 01h35 in Johannesburg, paring its advance this month to 2.1%. Yields on benchmark 10-year government bonds dropped two basis points to 9.29%.