The rand continued its substantial see-saw swings against the dollar on Thursday, first firming by 1.6% and then immediately weakening 0.5% against the greenback.
And analyst say the period of sharp fluctuations are not over.
“We expect large swings in the exchange rate with a wide range of R14.25/$ to R14.69 [On Thursday],” said Bianca Botes of Peregrine Treasury Solutions in a morning note.
The actual trading range for Thursday thus far is R14.32 - R14.63.
The local currency has been battered in recent days by broad emerging market weakness, falling from R13.32/$ on August 8 to trade at R14.52 to the greenback by 13:21 on Thursday afternoon.
The local currency opened the day’s trade at R14.56/$ and rapidly firmed to R14.32/$ before weakening.
The rand’s steep decline, according to analysts, has been strongly tied by the free-fall in the Turkish lira as that country remains locked in a trade tariff dispute with the US.
But on Wednesday, as the lira firmed, the rand continued to slide - at one stage losing as much as 3% of its value.
“[Wednesday] was a strange day for the rand when comparing it to other emerging market peers,” said Andre Botha, Senior Currency Dealer at TreasuryONE in a morning note.
“We have seen the main driver of emerging market weakness over the past week, Turkey, gaining significant ground against the US dollar but none of that spilled over to South Africa. In fact, the rand lost a fair amount of ground, trading at a high of R14.74/$ yesterday afternoon.”
Botha ascribed Wednesday's slide to two factors. First, a report by global ratings agency Moody's that the pace of the SA fiscal consolidation will be slower than forecast, due to lower expected economic growth and rising government wage bill.
The second factor was continuing uncertainty about how the state’s proposed land redistribution plan – which includes expropriation without compensation - will work.
Botha said however the fall on Wednesday was likely exaggerated, and the rand could strengthen.
“The fiscal problem was expected, and the land issue has been milling around in the market for quite some time. This leads us to believe the move yesterday will run out of steam and that the rand could retrace the losses and try and test below R14.30/$ again.”
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