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UPDATE 1-South Africa`s rand firmer as dollar dips on U.S. rate cut bets

Published: 2019-06-25 tag: basic materials

JSE:SOL JSE:SLM JSE:MRP JSE:OMN JSE:JSE

(Updates prices, adds quote and stocks)

JOHANNESBURG, June 25 (Reuters) - South Africa’s rand firmed on Tuesday as the prospect of monetary easing by the Federal Reserve knocked demand for the U.S. currency, which in turn supported developing world currencies.

Stocks fell as investor anxiety mounted over this week’s U.S.-China trade talks at the G20 Summit.

At 1505 GMT the rand was 0.5% firmer at 14.2900 per dollar.

Dollar sales have accelerated since the Fed last week signalled it would cut interest rates before year-end on mounting worries about the fallout from U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade disputes with China and others.

The United States and China have waged an 11-month trade war marked by tit-for-tat tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of each others’ goods, roiling financial markets, disrupting supply chains and crimping global economic growth prospects.

The markets now await the outcome of the U.S-China talks at the G20 summit.

“The focus remains on trade wars as markets await the G20 summit with bated breath,” said Bianca Botes, a Treasury partner at Peregrine Treasury Solutions. “The outcome of U.S. China trade talks will set the tone.”

On the bourse, the benchmark JSE Top-40 Index fell 0.91% to 52,279.51 points while the broader All-Share Index was down 0.7% to 58,343 points.

“A lot of shares are waiting for the G20 Summit on Friday and the outlook between President Trump and China. There really is a risk-off feel,” said Sanlam Portfolio Manager Nick Kunze.

Chemicals and energy company Sasol and retailer Mr Price were the worst performers on the blue-chip index with Sasol down 4.08% to 350.15 rand and Mr Price 2.54% lower at 200.29 rand.

On the upside, chemical and fertiliser company Omnia Holdings soared 11.79% on the blue-chip index after announcing it would evaluate returns from its business units and look at cost-cutting measures.

Troubled construction company Group Five also announced that its chairwoman and three non-executive directors had resigned. The company delisted in March after announcing it had filed for creditor protection.

In fixed income, the yield on the benchmark 2026 bond was flat at 8.17%. (Reporting by Olivia Kumwenda-Mtambo and Naledi Mashishi; Editing by Ken Ferris)