Rewards for the rand as political risks fade

Easing political turmoil in SA may help turn the rand from this month’s emerging-market pariah into an outperformer next year.

Strategists at Societe Generale (SocGen) and Credit Agricole expect the currency to be in a sweet spot next year, given that the rand has much in its favour: a healthy interest-rate differential with the dollar, a still-hawkish central bank and rising demand for SA’s commodity exports as China reopens its economy.

“Despite the heightened political uncertainties, we remain positive on the rand,” SocGen strategists including Phoenix Kalen and Marek Drimal wrote in a note. “We expect two more rate hikes by the Reserve Bank and expect China’s reopening from zero-Covid will boost sentiment around the rand.”

The Bank is forecast to raise its policy rate by at least another 50 basis points (bps) to a peak of 7.5% by November next year, according to market pricing. 

With the Fed widely expected to slow its pace of rate increases next year — or even halt them altogether — that would maintain the rand’s yield advantage over the dollar, boosting the rand’s carry appeal. The local currency has already returned 7.5% since the beginning of November for investors who borrow the US currency to speculate in higher-yielding assets.

“When the dust settles” after this year’s high inflation and aggressive monetary tightening in the developed world, some markets “may present an attractive mix of high carry and stronger growth outlook”, Credit Agricole strategists including Sebastien Barbe and Olga Yangol wrote in a note.

The rand’s “relatively high carry and terms-of-trade positioning” makes it one of the best emerging-market (EM) prospects for 2023, they said.

Rand bulls received a boost on Tuesday when MPs quashed an advisory panel’s report that recommended President Cyril Ramaphosa should face an impeachment hearing for possible breaches of the constitution. Softer-than-expected US inflation data also helped gains.

The currency has gained 2.5% in the past two days, erasing the losses it racked up after the Ramaphosa report was made public on November 30 and the president considered resigning. Even so, the rand is the most undervalued in two years on a real-effective-exchange-rate basis, according to Bank for International Settlements data.

The rand has a “promising mix of carry/FX potential”, the Credit Agricole strategists wrote.  The currency is “not expensive”, though politics remains “a swing factor and structural changes are needed”, they said.

Bloomberg News. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

Source: businesslive.co.za