The Investor - Moneyweb's monthly investment magazine Issue 6 | Page 29

strategist John Cairns, speaking in a conference call. He described the events as a severe shock to SA with other commodity exporters including Brazil and Australia being hit as hard. “Falling commodity prices have been a major negative factor for the rand since 2011. Commodities are the channel through which a weak China is feeding into the rand.” By Colin Anthony with few signs of any turnaround in demand to support falling prices. The 19-commodity Thomson Reuters/core commodity CRB index fell 2.7% on August 24 to its lowest level since 2002. That took year-to date losses to nearly 20%, according to Reuters. Platinum was at its lowest level since 2008. One bright spot for SA is the gold price, which has attracted quite a bit of safe-haven buying. The gold price climbed from $1 091.90/oz to $1 156.50/oz in the first three weeks of August while the rand tested R14/dollar, having started August at around R12.60/dollar. As a result the rand gold price of gold shot up to above R15 000/oz, levels last seen in January 2013. While this is a short-term boon for SA’s gold miners, there is not much optimism around that the gold rally will be sustained. “Gold is not long-term buy but it might be in the short term,” said RMB currency What's up in International markets While China’s economic woes caused a tumultuous month on the markets with its stock market refusing to toe political exhortations, Japan’s economy has now also slumped. Japan’s GDP shrank in the second quarter by 1.6% year on year, with sluggish exports, weak consumer demand and low corporate spending the main culprits. But, as has become the norm of late, the stock market initially responded positively to the news on the prospect of further stimulus measures from the Japanese government, which is in the thick of its quantitative easing programme. The Nikkei stock average had been losing ground over the past month before bouncing on the GDP data. But it then succumbed to the global sell-off sparked by China’s meltdown. Wall Street also had a bad month, suffering its biggest weekly decline since 2011 in the week ending August 22 on the back of the meltdown in China’s stock market. Until then, US stocks had remained largely unscathed with defensive sectors holding things together on the back of strong interest in high dividend-paying stocks, healthcare and consumer companies. Of more direct concern to SA is that China’s days of pulling emerging markets up by their bootstraps are over. In fact, China’s woes are now having the opposite effect, contributing to sharp declines in emerging market currencies. curb the Shanghai index’s fall. These include devaluing its currency and investing in equities through state agencies – but those measures look like they are failing and there were always questions as to how long that could be sustained. Sooner or later, market forces will overpower artificial ones. Traders will be hoping for some positive news to shift sentiment for the month ahead. Domestically, there’s not much that will help, with the plummeting rand supporting share prices but not helping the real economy. Globally, the US and Europe are going to have to deliver some good news to change sentiment, and that does not look likely. It’s been a bleak month with no prospect of change. The Chinese government has taken dramatic steps in its attempts to ISSUE 6 – SEPTEMBER 2015 29