South Africa's gold legacy: The psychological impact of rising gold prices
Image: Ai
Despite having lost its crown as the gold capital of the world, South Africa is still indirectly – and psychologically – benefitting from the yellow metal's gain in popularity as a safe haven.
As of 12.30pm on Tuesday afternoon, the precious metal was rising towards $3,340 an ounce, although off its $3 500 record high in April, it is still 'holding up,' as Dr Azar Jammine, director and chief economist at Econometrix, said.
Gold is 'holding up' as its underlying value is a hedge against economic uncertainty, said Jammine.
Speaking with IOL, Jammine noted that gold is still benefiting both the local currency, as well as gold miners. The rand is still flirting around the R17.70 to the dollar level and could drop into the R16 to R16.99 range, according to Old Mutual chief economist, Johann Els.
Gold has a long history in South Africa, which was once the world's biggest gold miner, losing that crown to China in 2006. The fact that it is no longer even in the top ten is, as Jammine said, 'very sad'.
Gold's history in South Africa dates back to the late 1800s, when a rush saw an effective shanty town developed in what is now Johannesburg. Pilgrims Rest and Barberton are historical sites for mining, with tourists still being able to pan for alluvial gold in Pilgrims Rest in Mpumalanga's Drakensburg area.
South Africa cannot claim to be gold's oldest source though, as the Royal Mint said that gold was first smelted in Egypt in 3 600 BC. The metal's history includes the first gold coins being struck in what was then Lydia, Asia Minor, in 600 BC.
The Minerals Council of South Africa notes on its website that, even though the Witwatersrand Basin remains the world's largest gold resource, more than half of the South African gold mining industry is 'marginal'.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Ad loading
The discovery of gold in South Africa in the late 19th century led to the development of Johannesburg, also known as Egoli or the City of Gold, as well as numerous towns near the gold diggings, such as Barberton and Pilgrim's Rest, the Council stated. In the 20th century, significant gold mines were established on the West Wits line, and towns like Carletonville and Klerksdorp became vital centres around the renowned gold mines, it added.
However, the Council said that the prominence of the gold sector began to decline in the early 21st century as mining operations reached deeper levels to access rich reef patches.
At the same time, the gold price experienced a substantial decrease from its previous highs, and the global economy encountered challenges, culminating in the 2008 financial crisis. 'Although the crisis has eased in many countries, the effects on the South African mining industry have been profound and enduring,' it noted.
Joburg's oldest working mine, incidentally, is at Gold Reef City.
Jammine said that South Africa is benefitting from the safe haven appeal of the yellow metal mentally.
The price has a psychological value on shares and the currency, said Jammine. He added that the perception is that South Africa is still a major gold producer and, as people think South Africa will have a large benefit from the metal, there is a psychological advantage for the rand and gold mining shares.
IOL

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

IOL News
31 minutes ago
- IOL News
Banks implicated in alleged rand manipulation likened to international cartels
Advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitobi, representing the Competition Commission,asked the Constitutional Court to rule that it has jurisdiction over international banks implicated in the alleged rand fixing saga. Image: File The alleged collusion by some of South Africa's leading banks alongside their international counterparts to manipulate the Rand has been described as a quintessential example of a transnational cartel. This assertion was made by Advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitobi SC, representing the Competition Commission, during a hearing at the Constitutional Court. Ngcukaitobi articulated a compelling narrative, stating, "They targeted our sovereignty - our rand - driven by profit. We are the only ones who have an interest in prosecuting them." His remarks come as the Competition Commission seeks to overturn the majority of findings of the Competition Appeal Court (CAC), particularly regarding the jurisdiction over the international banks involved. The court, which heard arguments on Tuesday, is expected to deliberate until Friday. A critical point of contention revolves around the extent of the commission's authority to act against foreign banks implicated in what is alleged to be a single overarching conspiracy related to rand manipulation. The suggestive conspiracy reportedly includes local giants such as Standard Bank, Nedbank, and First Rand Bank, who are accused of colluding to manipulate the exchange rate of the Rand against the US dollar. Ngcukaitobi's argument hinges on whether the commission has the jurisdiction to enforce regulatory action on banks without a local physical presence, termed peregrinus. According to the Cape Times, during the hearing, Ngcukaitobi emphasised that the impact of alleged rand-fixing has tangible consequences for South African consumers, particularly when purchasing imported goods. He stated, "Price manipulation has a permanent effect. It introduces a permanent structural price. A distortion affects the value of imported products.' Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ The discussion included critical legal considerations, with judges questioning the enforceability of any potential orders against foreign banks in South Africa. Ngcukaitobi assured the court that many implicated institutions maintain a presence within the country, thereby allowing for compliance measures should the court rule in favour of the commission. Listening to arguments regarding the CAC's previous ruling that denied the majority of implicated banks a case to answer, Ngcukaitobi insisted that all involved were, or should have been, aware of the collusion occurring in private chatrooms among agents manipulating the rand/dollar exchange. The advocate vigorously defended the commission's position, asserting that even local banks that claimed no participation in the conversations within the chatrooms could not distance themselves from the effects of collusion. "They did not have participants in the chatrooms, but if your trading pattern fits the fact patterns in the chatrooms, you are in the SOC," he argued, underscoring the systemic nature of the alleged conspiracy. As the proceedings unfold, Ngcukaitobi has laid out a clear challenge: to recognise that South Africa is uniquely positioned to seek justice in this matter, given its direct effects on the nation's economy. He observed, "It is often straightforward to prosecute firms accused of cartel conduct, as the conduct is usually clear. But cartels have evolved over the years; they are now bigger and transnational." Ngcukaitobi concluded by arguing that the CAC's judgment contained legal errors and implored the Constitutional Court to allow the matter to proceed to trial, where the merits of the case could be thoroughly examined. IOL

IOL News
an hour ago
- IOL News
Turning a shock into strategy: South Africa's measured response to the US 30% tariff hike
Washington's 30% tariff on South African goods took effect on August. Image: Armand Hough / Independent Newspapers When Washington's 30% tariff on South African goods took effect on August 7, outrage was the easy emotion. The better response is discipline. Within days, Pretoria set out a five-pillar plan that blends firm diplomacy with market diversification and practical support for businesses. If we execute with urgency and transparency, this shock can become the push we needed to reset and broaden our export mix. Keep talking, not shouting The first pillar is engagement, not escalation. Cabinet has approved a revised offer that answers the issues highlighted by the US Trade Representative in its 2025 National Trade Estimates. The logic is straightforward: clear the technical hurdles, keep negotiations alive, and create room for the tariff to be reduced or removed. That is not capitulation. It is the work of professional tradecraft: deal with the specifics on paper, then work through the politics. Some of those specifics are already moving. South Africa has confirmed sanitary and phytosanitary arrangements for poultry, blueberries and pork. These are dry terms, but they decide whether containers move or sit. The USA–Africa Trade Desk has signalled that shipments of poultry and pork are expected within about two weeks, using the ports of New Orleans, Savannah and Norfolk. Containers on the water build more confidence than any podium statement. Buy time, protect capacity The second pillar is an economic response package that gives firms breathing space and preserves productive capacity. An Export Support Desk is up and running, with companies already getting help. The government has also announced a Localisation Support Fund and an Export and Competitiveness Support Programme to provide working capital and finance for plant and equipment. The competition authorities are preparing a narrowly defined block exemption for exporters so that businesses can coordinate on logistics and market information without falling foul of the law. In a world of tight margins and unpredictable freight, that kind of focused, time-limited coordination can be the difference between staying open and switching off a shift. Diversification is the strategy, not the Plan B The third pillar is diversification. We have lived with concentration risk for too long. Relying heavily on any single market means every policy swing abroad lands on our factory floors and farm gates. Diversification must be a pipeline of products, protocols and dates, not a slogan. Here, there is tangible movement. China has tabled a draft protocol that covers five stone fruit types: apricots, peaches, nectarines, plums and prunes, with a target to sign in September on the margins of the G20 Agriculture meetings. If that timeline holds, first consignments could move in the coming season. This is the kind of high-value, horticulture-led opening that suits South Africa's strengths. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Ad loading Diversification is also sound risk management. The United States accounts for about 4% of our agricultural exports, roughly R9.8 billion, and that share has grown strongly since 2018. Important, yes, but not destiny. A strategy that leans harder into the AfCFTA, deepens access in the European Union where protocols allow, and opens demand in Asia and the Gulf can smooth cash flows across seasons and reduce the volatility premium that investors currently price into South African agribusiness. Defend fairly, compete confidently The fourth pillar is trade defence. When the US restricts access for many countries at once, diverted goods look for new homes. Some arrive at dumped or subsidised prices. The government has indicated it will use anti-dumping, countervailing and safeguard measures, within World Trade Organisation rules, to protect local producers if surges materialise. That is not protectionism for its own sake. It is a rules-based tool to preserve production capacity while exporters rebuild demand elsewhere. Use local demand as a bridge The fifth pillar is demand at home. Proudly South Africa's Shop Proudly SA and Market Access Platform launched in July to help buyers find accredited local suppliers quickly. These platforms are not a detour from competitiveness. They are a bridge that keeps order books ticking over while new export lanes bed down. Big retailers, manufacturers and public entities can strengthen the bridge by publishing monthly targets for local spend and reporting against them. That level of practical accountability will matter to a small factory in Ekurhuleni or a packhouse in Ceres facing a tighter quarter. What leaders should do now For business leaders and policymakers, three ideas should shape the next quarter. Be radically transparent. A simple, living dashboard should separate what has been announced from what is operational. List the filing date of the revised offer, the gazetting of the block exemption, approvals under the Export and Competitiveness Support Programme, and actual container arrivals. Weekly, dated updates help CFOs plan cash, reassure lenders and send a clear signal that execution, not spin, is the priority. Treat diversification as an investment case. Replicate the stone fruit opportunity across a pipeline of products and markets. Publish a grid of protocol gaps to close. Resource laboratories and inspectors so certificates do not become the new bottleneck. Task missions abroad with commercial outcomes and report results. Countries that win in agri-trade do not rely on luck; they rely on relentless, technical market opening. Use the rules to keep the field fair while firms adapt. A well-drafted, time-limited block exemption can enable shared freight and information that lower costs without dulling rivalry. Keep the scope tight, set clear sunset clauses, and report uptake publicly. Pair this with ready-to-use trade remedies and we can protect capacity without freezing the market. None of this is easy. Tariffs at this level squeeze margins, unsettle contracts and test leadership. But the direction is right: negotiate hard, support firms, defend fairly and diversify quickly. If we treat this moment as the catalyst to reduce concentration risk and build new demand for South African products, we will come out leaner, more agile and less exposed the next time geopolitics intrudes on trade. Success will not be declared at a press conference. It will show up in containers shipped, workers retained and new markets opened. In the weeks ahead, look for concrete markers: acknowledgement of the revised offer by Washington, publication of the exporter block exemption, the arrival of US meat shipments, and the signing of China's stone fruit protocols. If those dominoes fall, optimism will not be wishful thinking. It will be a strategy, working. Dr Brett Lyndall Singh is a medical doctor, Chief Executive of AOM Group and a scholar at theTsinghua University Vanke School of Public Health in Beijing, China. Image: Supplied Dr Brett Lyndall Singh is a medical doctor, Chief Executive of AOM Group and a scholar at theTsinghua University Vanke School of Public Health in Beijing, China. He is a Brand South Africa Play Your Part Ambassador and member of the G20 Young Entrepreneurs Alliance. *** The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of Independent Media or IOL. BUSINESS REPORT


The Citizen
3 hours ago
- The Citizen
'MK party only true hope for total liberation of SA people,'
Zuma's lecture focused predominantly on Brics and global politics. Former president and MK party leader Jacob Zuma has described his party as the 'only true hope for the last stage of the total liberation of the South African people.' Zuma delivered the 8th Annual Leadership Lecture at the University of Professional Studies Accra (UPSA) in Accra, Ghana, on Tuesday. Lecture The lecture was held under the theme 'The geo-politics and geo-economics of de-dollarisation: BRICS currency strategy, lessons for Africa's common currency, and beyond.' Zuma's lecture focused predominantly on Brics and global politics. But he also spoke about the MK party and the 'future of South Africa.' MK pillars The MK party leader said the party's manifesto, which is referred to as the 'People's Mandate,' outlines eight pillars, which serve as the foundation for our vision and policy proposals. Zuma said the pillars include reclaiming dignity; land and mineral resources; people's power; reclaiming the economy; building human capital and technological capabilities; reclaiming space, safety and security; and sovereignty and position in Africa and the world. 'Together, these pillars embody the uncompromising vision of the MK Party as the only true hope for the last stage of the total liberation of the South African people, a liberation not just from apartheid's political chains, but from the economic captivity, poverty, unemployment, and neo-colonial domination that continue to strangle our nation. 'Unlike the compromised so-called Government of National Unity, the MK Party represents the genuine continuation of the liberation struggle, carrying forward the spirit of our forebears to deliver full freedom, dignity and prosperity to every South African,' Zuma said. H.E. President Jacob Zuma was adorned as a Chief of the Ga Mantse Traditional Council in a ceremony led by the High Priest of the Ga State, Nuumo Akwaa Mensah III (Nae Wulomo), in Accra, Ghana. — uMkhonto WeSizwe Party (Official) (@MkhontoweSizwex) August 19, 2025 ALSO READ: Zuma files urgent bid to challenge Ramaphosa's Mchunu decision after ConCourt loss The West During the lecture, Zuma said Africa's dependency on the West 'is a form of slow death.' 'We export minerals and crops at the lowest prices, only to buy them back as manufactured goods at ten times the cost. We face tariffs on our exports, yet we are lectured about free trade. 'We borrow in dollars, only for our currencies to collapse under exchange-rate manipulation. And when we resist, coups are sponsored, leaders are assassinated, and sanctions are imposed. This is not a partnership. It is exploitation,' Zuma said. Africa's liberation Zuma said the MK party recognises that Africa's liberation is incomplete without strong intra-African solidarity. 'We will therefore continue to agitate for robust and action-oriented diplomatic relations between South Africa and Ghana, ensuring that these instruments serve the real needs of our people, advance pan-African unity, and resist external manipulation of our continental partnerships. 'It will be the women, youth, the students, the scholars, the innovators of Africa and the poorest and downtrodden people of our continent who must carry this revolution forward,' Zuma said. 'Chaining Africa' Zuma said: 'The West built its power by chaining Africa. 'The new generation of Africans must build our power by breaking those chains. We must move from the classroom to the policy room, from the laboratory to the marketplace, from the lecture hall to the halls of power. Africa must produce not just employees for foreign corporations, but inventors, thinkers, and builders of African systems. 'We are not beggars at the world's table, we are builders of a new table.' ALSO READ: Dirco blasts Zuma for using SA flag in meeting with Moroccan minister [VIDEO]