The Star Early Edition

SA equities among best performing in emerging markets

- PETER LITTLE Peter Little is Fund manager at Anchor Capital.

SOUTH African equities were among the best performing in emerging markets last month as seen on the FTSE/ JSE Capped SWIX Index, which was up 4.2% month-on-month (m/m).

A worse-than-expected performanc­e by the ANC in the May elections ushered in the unexpected prospect of a centrist coalition government led by the country’s two most popular political parties, the ANC and the DA, bringing with it the hope of muchneeded structural reform for SA.

Stocks geared to the domestic economy were the key beneficiar­y of improving sentiment. Banks and insurers both rose 16% m/m and rallied alongside general and discretion­ary retailers (up14% m/m and 18% m/m, respective­ly) and domestical­ly-skewed real estate investment trusts (REITs), Growthpoin­t (up 11% m/m) and Redefine (up 12% m/m).

The local currency was also a beneficiar­y of the improving sentiment, overcoming a strong dollar to make the rand one of the best-performing major global currencies last month (up 3.3% m/m).

The rand ended the first half of 2024 as the only major currency (besides the heavily sanctioned Russian rouble) that has strengthen­ed against the dollar in the year to date, up 0.9%.

The strong rand acted as a headwind to the performanc­e of JSE-listed stocks. Investment conglomera­tes Naspers and Prosus, which slid 4% m/m, could not overcome the currency headwind and lacklustre sentiment towards Chinese investment­s.

JSE-listed miners shaved 1% of the FTSE/JSE Capped SWIX performanc­e for June as weak commodity prices dragged the sector down. Miners with significan­t iron ore exposure were among the worst performing as the iron ore price fell 6% m/m, leaving the metal price 23% lower year to date.

SA’s latest inflation data was essentiall­y in line with expectatio­ns as core inflation (up 4.6% y/y) hovered around the mid-point of the SA Reserve Bank target range at 4.5% for the second consecutiv­e month.

While the inflation data did nothing to change investors’ expectatio­ns with regard to the path of the country’s benchmark rate, which is expected to track global central bank rates in remaining elevated for longer, the government’s 10-year borrowing rate fell 0.8% to 11.4% a year as the country’s perceived credit risk improved.

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