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Budget Speech Ruins the Party for South Africa’s Rand and Bonds

Budget Speech Ruins the Party for South Africa’s Rand and Bonds

(Bloomberg) --

Until this week, October was looking like a good month for South Africa’s currency and bonds. Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s dismal budget statement changed all that.

From being about 4% stronger against the dollar in the month through Monday, the rand has swung to a monthly loss, one of only five emerging-market currencies to decline in October along with India’s rupee, the Chilean and Argentinian pesos, and Turkey’s lira. Benchmark government bond yields hit a five-week low last week. Since then, they’ve climbed 40 basis points to the highest since early May.

Budget Speech Ruins the Party for South Africa’s Rand and Bonds

South Africa’s debt pile is increasing fast, economic growth is weak and there’s a lack of progress turning around the ailing state-owned electricity company. That raises the risk the country will lose the stable outlook on its last investment-grade rating with Moody’s Investors Service.

A switch to a negative outlook could be the precursor to a downgrade that would increase borrowing costs and trigger massive investment outflows at a time when the country relies on portfolio investment to finance its current-account deficit. Foreign investors sold a net 3 billion rand ($198 million) of South African bonds on Wednesday, the biggest daily outflow in almost two months.

“The bottom line is that South Africa’s fiscus is in dire straits,” Nema Ramkhelawan-Bhana, a Johannesburg-based analyst at Rand Merchant Bank, said in a client note. “The downward revisions to budget forecasts are testament to the country’s economic and fiscal stress – a reality for investors with interests in SA; their pessimism was expressed through the sell-off in the local currency and bond market.”

The rand declined 1.1% to 15.1646 per dollar on Thursday, adding to yesterday’s 2.5% drop. It’s down 0.2% this month. Yields on 2026 government rand bonds climbed 12 basis points to 8.56% after soaring 23 basis points yesterday.

To contact the reporter on this story: Robert Brand in Cape Town at rbrand9@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dana El Baltaji at delbaltaji@bloomberg.net, Alex Nicholson, John Viljoen

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