November has been good to South Africa’s rand for the past five years. This time is different.
South Africa’s currency is on track for an 0.3% decline against the dollar this month, one of only four emerging-market peers to weaken. MSCI’s developing nation currency index is set for a 2.9% November gain.
That’s in contrast to the rand’s performance since 2018, when it strengthened four out of five times in November for an average gain of 3.4%, according to seasonal data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s double the advance in the next best month, May.
While most emerging-market currencies have benefited from attractive carry returns and a weaker dollar, the rand has been weighed down by local “noise,” according to Robert Hoodless, FX and macro analyst at InTouch Capital.
And now a new risk has emerged for investors: the central bank confirmed last week that it is in talks with the National Treasury to find a way to tap foreign-exchange reserves to fund the country’s growing budget deficit.
“Noise around the South African Reserve Bank and the gold and foreign currency account has been a distressing reminder of why many have got their fingers repeatedly burnt in times gone by,” Hoodless said. “South Africa must compete for capital flows, and at this time others are winning out, leaving the rand at the mercy of the continued undercurrent of the poor domestic outlook.”