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UPDATE 1-South African markets falter as risk appetite wanes

Published: 2018-10-23 tag: financials

JSE:NPN JSE:NED JSE:TBS JSE:ISA

* Stocks follow Asia and Europe lower

* Investors flee for safety

* Rand gives back earlier session gains

* Naspers biggest decliner (Adds stocks, analyst quotes)

JOHANNESBURG, Oct 23 (Reuters) - South African assets weakened across the board on Tuesday, erasing gains from the previous session as appetite for riskier assets was muted by global concerns.

Worries over Italy’s budget, Brexit talks and Saudi Arabia’s handling of Jamal Khashoggi’s killing sapped investor confidence in emerging markets.

On Monday, South African assets were broadly firmer on the back of measures from Chinese authorities to boost the economy.

“Since then, renewed concerns regarding the Italian budget and geopolitical factors have seen the US dollar recover across the board, and the markets have sought traditional safe haven assets,” Nedbank analysts said in a note.

At 1456 GMT, the rand traded at 14.4100 versus the dollar, 0.51 percent weaker on the day, compared to a close of 14.3375 in New York.

Government bonds were slightly weaker, with the yield on the benchmark instrument due in 2026 up 0.5 basis points at 9.170 percent.

South Africa-focused investors will turn their attention to Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s inaugural budget speech on Wednesday, when he is expected to unveil spending shifts to try to haul the economy out of recession.

“Markets will look to Treasury to provide clarification on expenditure overruns, debt-stabilisation methods, stimulus support in a weak growth environment and state-owned entities reform,” Rand Merchant Bank analysts said in a note.

In the equities market, the Johannesburg All-share index closed down 1.98 percent at 51,168 points, while the Top-40 index fell 2.23 percent to 45,007 points.

Market heavy-weight Naspers was responsible for much of the decline on the top-40 index, becoming the second biggest loser on the bourse.

It ended the session 4.59 percent weaker at 2,681 rand, tracking declines of Chinese gaming and social media firm Tencent Holdings <0700.HK., in which it holds a 31 percent stake.

Food producers Tiger Brands and Pioneer Food fell 3.05 percent to 247.37 rand and 1.54 percent to 78.81 rand respectively after Morgan Stanley cut target prices on both stocks. (Reporting by Nqobile Dludla Editing by Joe Brock)