Rand Rides the Trade War 30c Stronger

Published 2019/11/19, 09:24

It was an interesting week as we waited for news on the Trade War while local SOEs took centre stage again. Uncertainty continued to dominate, bringing range trading and hesitant markets.

The Rand's weakening trend resumed this last week as we saw the crucial R15/$ level being tested again - only for the market to reverse in the latter half of the week to make a comeback.

It is now a case of whether the Rand can finally get a clearer trend heading into the new week but let's start with a review of how it all happened this last week to give us some insight.

Key Moments (11-15 Nov 2019)

Here were some of the biggest talking points from the week:

  • Trade War - it appeared the home stretch at least to Phase 1 of the deal was on its way, and we were going to see the first step towards a white flag between the two nations.
  • SAA - the State Owned Entity sinks further as strikes plague flights and normal business... what next?
  • Brexit - with the December election bearing down on us, it seems Brexit is back on the crash course, once again...
  • Eskom unstable - the threat of load shedding is not going away anytime soon, as further downtime hurts production

The news to start the week was good, as a word from the US over the weekend suggest that talks are “progressing nicely”. However, the US noted that it was only willing to sign the trade deal if it was one that would benefit the United States.

And the theme which started the week seemed to carry through it, with the ebb and flow of the Trade War taking centre stage.

However, despite the good news to start the week, the Rand began on the back foot, trading as high as R14.96 early Monday.

As always, this reminds us that there are FAR more factors to consider than just the Trade War...

And really that there are far too many factors for us to even try to track them all down and come out with an expected market trend based on news.

One of those factors to consider was Eskom, as they warned heading into the week that they were under severe pressure to produce enough electricity. This is a major concern for business and can overrule global sentiment as to something like the Trade War.

However, once South African trade opened for the day, we saw the Rand make a mini-recovery to closer to R14.80 on Tuesday afternoon.

Then SA's retail sales came in well below estimates to provide a trigger to push the market all the way up to test the R15/$ level on Wednesday:

USD/ZAR

And it was then job cuts which were making headlines at ArcelorMittal (AS:MT) and SAA.

With the Saldanha steel plant being closed down, and the restructuring starting at SAA, it was difficult times.

At the same time, unions are demanding higher pay and resulting in a massive strike, costing the airline R52m a day, with complete deadlock across the airline heading into the weekend.

Pravin Gordhan weighed in on the situation saying that "SAA is not too big to fail" and we headed into the weekend with SAA playing hardball, saying "no work, no pay".

This could just be the last nail in the coffin for the ruined airline.

Meanwhile, in other news:

  • The idea that China has been worse hit by the Trade War than the US seems, to be confirmed every single week, as data released this weeks points to an ailing economy, which should lead to further monetary stimulus to stay afloat.
  • US Fed chair Jerome Powell hinted that further US interest rate cuts are less likely, due to their “current policy settings being appropriate”. However, he also warned that US debt is 'on unsustainable path', and that a recession would be very difficult to manage with the amount of debt that the US is accumulating every year. A very valid statement - very difficult indeed!!!
  • Back in the headlines in the UK was December's election - with less than a month to go, it is really beginning to take centre stage. The key debating point will surely only be Brexit, with different candidates having their different views on how this is going to be achieved. Standby for a turbulent end of year for the UK!
  • As the week went on, so the Trade War news continued, helping trigger some positive market sentiment. On Thursday, White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow proclaimed that Washington and Beijing are very close to reaching a breakthrough (finally?). Although Kudlow revealed little detail on this development, markets seemed to cheer...and why not! Here Business Live details why a US-China Trade Deal could help SA

All this positivity heading into the end of the week provided some excellent triggers, and we saw the tide turn on Thursday with the ZAR breaking lower.

Friday provided more of the same, as we saw a 30+ cent gain over the two days:

The Rand - Positive sentiments

So on a high note, the Rand forged its way to the close, having gotten the better of the Dollar through the week!

The Week Ahead (18-22 Nov 2019)

So Monday starts with the Rand having enjoyed a good week prior, but the question is whether it can improve further?

The week as some important data releases, with the most impactful probably being US Fed minutes and SARB MPC interest rate decision, which could provide some potential triggers for moves (apart from other global and local news).

We are approaching some important inflexion points in our Elliott Wave-based analysis, which should provide some clarity on the 2 potential scenarios playing out - and we will be watching some key levels closely to confirm the direction in the coming weeks.

Look forward to sharing my outlook with you.

To your success~

James Paynter

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