Rand continues plunge as recession fears grip markets amid intensified trade war

The South African rand has lost 6% to the US dollar in the space of one week.

The South African rand has lost 6% to the US dollar in the space of one week.

Image by: Picture: Henk Kruger/Independent Newspapers

Published 12h ago

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The South African rand continued to decline sharply against major currencies on Monday morning, as recession fears gripped global markets, amid an intensified trade war as China announced retaliation measures against US tariffs.

The rand hit R19.40 to the US dollar at around 10.30am on Monday, extending its decline in the wake of Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs that were announced last week.

The local currency has declined by over R1 to the dollar in the space of a week, falling by 6% since March 31. It has lost 4.75% of its value to the greenback since the US President's 'Liberation Day' announcements on Wednesday, April 2.

The rand has lost 6.4% to the euro since April 2, trading at R21.28 on Monday morning.

Should the local currency remain at current levels or depreciate further, it will create inflationary pressures, although fuel price pressure could be negated by falling international oil prices, with Brent Crude oil having retreated sharply to $65.50. 

On the markets, the JSE All-Share Index was down 1.83% to 80,058 on Monday, having plummeted by 5.26% on Friday.

According to AFP, trillions of dollars have been wiped off stock markets worldwide, and Asian equities declined further on Monday ahead of the much anticipated opening of US markets.

In Japan the Nikkei fell by almost 8% in early trade, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng plunged almost 10% and the Shanghai composite more than 4%.

Global recession fears have been further stoked by China's announcement that it planned to implement retaliatory tariffs of 34% on all US goods from April 10.

"(This) is blunt-force economic warfare," said Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management.

"The market's telling you in plain language: global demand is vanishing, and a global recession is on the cards and coming on fast," Innes added.

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