/ 3 January 2012

Rand starts 2012 on firmer footing

South Africa’s rand was slightly firmer against the dollar on the second trading day of the year on Tuesday and should stay largely range-bound as market players drift slowly back after the Christmas and new year breaks.

Local traders returned to the market on Tuesday after local exchanges were closed for a post New Year public holiday in South Africa on Monday.

By 6.39am GMT the local currency was up 0.28% on the day at 8.0520 to the dollar compared with Monday’s close at 8.0750.

“The rand is slightly higher, we did see it testing the lows of the day, but it’s still thin liquidity at the moment, so it’s going to be quite difficult,” RMB trader Lee Naisbitt said.

“I think for now we’re still in a range. If we manage to get through 8.03 we should target a bit lower [a firmer rand]. But to start off the day we’re looking at 8.03 to 8.08. It’s going to be quite erratic and pretty range-bound this week.”

The rand, a very liquid currency, plunged nearly 22% against the dollar in 2011, one of the steepest falls globally, taking the brunt of an emerging market asset sell-off as investors worried about the effects of a debt crisis in the eurozone.

On Tuesday the rand took its cue from Europe’s common currency, which edged higher against the dollar and the yen but looked set to remain under pressure in 2012.

Government debt was flat as the Johannesburg bond exchange resumed trade for the year, with the heavily traded 2015 issue unchanged from its December 30 close of 6.73%, as was the longer dated 2026 bond at 8.485%.

South African high-yielding bonds held up well despite last year’s global flight from higher-risk assets, with net foreign inflows in 2011 reaching about R48-billion, according to data from the local exchange. — Reuters