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Rand strengthened in early trade on Monday
The South African (SA) Rand strengthened in early trade on Monday supported by easing oil prices, as investors weighed the prospects ​of a breakthrough in United States (US) and Iran peace negotiations ahead of a local ‌interest rate decision later in the week.
Rand traded at 16.3375 against the Dollar, about 0.8% up from its previous close.
Oil prices ​hit two-week lows on Monday on optimism that the US and ​Iran were moving closer towards a peace deal even though ⁠both countries remained at odds over key issues.
On Saturday, US ​President Donald Trump said Washington and Iran had “largely negotiated” an understanding on ​a peace deal that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz, which carried a fifth of global shipments of oil and liquefied natural gas before the conflict.
Domestically ​focused investor attention will be pinned on the Central bank’s ​rate decision on Thursday.
Economists at Nedbank expect the monetary policy committee to raise interest ‌rates ⁠by 25 basis points, taking the repo rate to 7% and the prime rate to 10.50%.
“Our analysis suggests that inflation expectations are particularly sensitive to petrol price increases, and we therefore see a ​relatively high risk ​of second-round effects.
⁠As such, tightening monetary policy now would ensure that the inflationary consequences of the supply-side shock are ​temporary and likely minimise the need for more ​severe tightening ⁠later in the cycle,” the bank’s Economists said in a research note.
Economic indicators due this week include the composite leading business cycle indicator ⁠on ​Tuesday, and producer inflation on Thursday.
SA’s benchmark 2035 government bond also strengthened in early deals, as the yield fell ​4.5 basis points to 8.635%.
–Reuters–