South Africa’s reliance on foreign money to finance the shortfall
on its current account makes it the most vulnerable in sub-Saharan
Africa to fallout from the U.K.’s vote to quit the European Union,
Moody’s Investors Service said.
“South Africa’s current-account deficit leaves it vulnerable to
short-term capital outflows amid changes in investors’ risk perceptions
and appetite,” Moody’s Vice President and Senior Analyst Zuzana Brixiova
wrote in an e-mailed report released on Friday. “The extent of South
Africa’s integration into global financial markets, including its
investment and financial links with the U.K. means it is the region’s
most exposed sovereign to the immediate financial sector fallout from
Brexit.”
Africa’s most-industrialized economy depends on capital inflows to
fund the shortfall on its current account, the broadest measure of trade
in goods and services, putting it at the mercy of global investor
sentiment. The deficit widened to 5 percent of gross domestic product in
the three months through March. South Africa’s currency initially
under-performed most emerging markets after the Brexit vote, reflecting
the economy’s dependence on investors’ money and close links with the
U.K., Moody’s said.
The rand strengthened by 0.4 percent to 14.7023 per dollar by 2:25
p.m. in Johannesburg on Friday after weakening to as low as 15.6819 on
June 24 after the Brexit result. More global liquidity due to reduced
chances of a U.S. rate hike and an expansionary monetary stance by the
Bank of England could increase the likelihood of the rand stabilizing,
Moody’s said.
While South Africa will avoid slipping into a recession this year
for the first time since 2009, any recovery will be adversely affected
by increased risk aversion and reduced investor appetite toward emerging
markets, Brixiova said. On Thursday, the International Monetary Fund cut
its 2016 growth forecast for South Africa’s economy to 0.1 percent from
0.6 percent. Low commodity prices and the worst drought in more than a
century contributed to a 1.2 percent contraction in gross domestic
product in the first quarter.
Moody’s left South Africa’s credit rating at two levels above non-investment grade in May. S&P Global Ratings kept
its assessment at BBB-, one level above junk, last month and warned it
could cut the nation’s debt evaluation unless more is done to boost
growth and combat political and labor instability. Fitch Ratings Ltd.
also kept its evaluation of South Africa’s debt at one level above junk.
http://www.bloomberg.com/professional/blog/s-africa-exposed-brexit-fallout-region-moodys-says/
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