South Africa investors face global growth storm clouds after choppy politics
JOHANNESBURG - Investors have flocked to South Africa's domestic bond markets, betting the country can stay the course on reforms despite political fractures, but tariff threats and the prospect of a global growth slowdown are casting a long shadow.
Africa's most industrialized nation depends on foreign investor support to manage its debt load and to keep borrowing costs in check as it faces persistent structural challenges, including unreliable electricity and governance issues that have weighed on its assets in the past.
"We view recent developments in the U.S. trade policies as a material risk to the growth and inflation outlook," said Thierry Larose, portfolio manager at Vontobel Asset Management, which holds domestic government bonds.
"We see the weaker U.S. dollar as the only meaningful tailwind for local assets."
Investor interest in domestic bonds has held up well so far. Treasury data shows non-resident holdings of local-currency bonds rose January through March to 25%, the highest since October. Data from the Institute of International Finance shows the nation drew $2.8 billion in fixed income inflows between December and March compared to outflows in Asia and a more mixed picture in emerging Europe and Latin America.
Performance was more patchy. Domestic currency bonds though have underperformed, losing 0.3% since January versus a 2.9% gain in the JPMorgan GBI-EM benchmark.
Meanwhile, South Africa's hard-currency bonds have outperformed Sub-Saharan African peers this year, losing 1.5% compared to a 3.3% drop across the broader Africa index.
DOUBLE WHAMMY
It's been far from a smooth ride for investors.
Markets initially turned from gloom over political uncertainty to optimism after last May's election, which forced the African National Congress into coalition with rival parties widely seen as business-friendly.
But tensions within the alliance spilled into public view in February, as the ANC and the Democratic Alliance clashed over tax and foreign policy, fuelling doubts about the coalition's staying power.
At the same time, U.S. President Donald Trump threatened sweeping new tariffs on nations around the world with his policy decisions broadly expected to stymie growth. For South Africa, this is a worry.
"South Africa has always had greater economic integration with the rest of the world and foreign ownership is pretty meaningful, so that has contributed to a relatively high beta to the global economic cycle," said Andrew Matheny, managing director, economics research at Goldman Sachs International.
The latest turmoil sent the rand tumbling to near-record low, before recovering to trade flat on the year.
Grant Webster, co-head of emerging markets sovereign and FX at Ninety One, which is bullish on both domestic and international South Africa bonds said "structurally weak growth, high debt, and the increase in domestic political noise in addition to extreme global economic and geopolitical uncertainty" dampened his outlook on the country.
JPMorgan has kept a neutral position on both the currency and local bonds, saying the latter was back at fair value and the near-term risk of a large selloff had fallen, though flagged that external recession risks were the biggest factor to watch.
And domestic politics might still throw a spanner in the works. A collapse of the government could affect investor confidence and policymaking, especially if the ANC must then rely on smaller parties to govern, Fitch Ratings said. But likely new coalition partners — such as ActionSA and Build One South Africa — support the fiscal framework. Downside risks from politics are already captured in its projections, said Thomas Garreau, Director at Fitch.
TARIFFS LOOM
South African policymakers are trying to reassure markets,
The U.S. makes up just 8% of exports — and a large chunk of the shipments are in precious and base metals, already exempt from the Trump tariffs. National Treasury said the direct impact of the levies would have been limited.
"Even under a full AGOA exclusion scenario, the GDP impact would be marginal — around 0.07%," the National Treasury told Reuters, referring to the African Growth and Opportunity Act, a U.S. flagship trade programme for the continent.
"However, certain sectors such as agriculture, construction, and retail would face disproportionate harm."
In the meantime, domestic reforms continue.
Revenue collections exceeded estimates for 2024/25, helping narrow the main budget deficit, Treasury said, adding it was busy engaging with ratings agencies and investors.
Meanwhile investors will be closely watching a review by ratings agency S&P Global Ratings, scheduled for May 16. S&P currently holds a positive outlook — signaling potential for an upgrade if fiscal and reform progress holds - its first such move in two decades.
"Recent political developments have not fundamentally changed our outlook for South Africa," said Lucie Villa, Senior Vice President at Moody's Ratings.
However, she warned there "are increasing downside risks due to the direct and indirect impacts of U.S. tariffs and political disagreements within the coalition on fiscal and economic policy." (Reporting by Colleen Goko and Kopano Gumbi in Johannesburg, editing by Karin Strohecker and Toby Chopra)
Hashtags

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


Arabian Post
18 minutes ago
- Arabian Post
Stablecoins Surge Underscores Treasury Market Shift
Stablecoins are processing roughly $33 trillion in yearly volume—around 20 times that of PayPal and three times Visa—while amassing $128 billion in U.S. Treasuries, placing these issuers among the top 20 holders of American debt and ahead of major nations such as Germany and Saudi Arabia. Data from Andreessen Horowitz's crypto arm shows that over 1 percent of the total U.S. dollar supply is now tokenised on blockchains. Major institutions, including Citi, project that by 2030 stablecoins could accumulate up to $3.7 trillion in Treasury holdings. While Ethereum and Tron currently underpin most of this infrastructure, emerging platforms such as Solana, Arbitrum and Base are gaining traction. Notably, on-chain data reveals that transactional activity in stablecoins appears largely decoupled from broader cryptocurrency trading volumes, indicative of growing real-world adoption. Today, these assets enable sub-second, sub-cent payments—positioning them as serious contenders to onboard the next billion users into the crypto economy. Market analysts warn that growing stablecoin-backed Treasury holdings may shift demand dynamics for U.S. government debt. One study from academia found that by the end of the first quarter of 2025, Tether held roughly $98.5 billion in Treasury bills—equating to 1.6 percent of total outstanding bills. The research estimates that this level of demand has directly driven down one-month Treasury yields by approximately 24 basis points, indicating that stablecoin issuance is already influencing funding costs and potentially easing liquidity pressures. ADVERTISEMENT Coinciding with this shift is a legislative push in Washington. A bill nearing Congressional approval would require issuers to fully back stablecoins with liquid assets, such as U.S. dollars and short-term Treasuries, and mandate monthly disclosures. Proponents suggest such regulation would reinforce investor trust, legitimize the sector and bolster U.S. debt demand. According to Reuters, Tether and Circle already hold a combined $166 billion in Treasuries—amounts that may increase further under binding legal frameworks. Financial authorities have offered mixed views. Moody's warns that large-scale liquidation driven by plunging confidence in stablecoin issuers could destabilise Treasury prices and spill over into broader fixed-income markets. Conversely, policymakers hope that expanded stablecoin activity could facilitate smoother funding for the Treasury, especially if issuers pivot toward demand for short-term debt like bills. Macro strategies are duly noted. Vanguard's rates chief suggests that sustained demand from digital currency custodians might spur the Treasury to favour issuing bills over long-term bonds, which could rebalance maturity profiles. Meanwhile, Bitwise's investment head argues that this growing digital demand could reinforce the dollar's position as the global reserve currency. Infrastructure diversification within stablecoins is evolving. Ethereum and Tron continue to dominate, but high-throughput chains like Solana, Arbitrum and Google-backed Base are attracting developers and users aiming to benefit from faster, cheaper payments. The presence of real-world transactions—such as merchant and remittance use cases—underscores that stablecoins are transcending crypto-speculative flows, with sub-cent fees and near-instant settlement now commonplace features. Emerging risks centre on financial-system vulnerability. The Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee cautioned that a significant diversion of deposits into stablecoins could dampen demand for Treasuries and potentially curb lending by commercial banks. Money-market managers remain vigilant, with some estimating that stablecoins must scale further before triggering systemic instability. Proponents counter that regulated stablecoins may alleviate pressures in the Treasury issuance process, with digital platforms absorbing demand in lieu of traditional buyers. Early legislative frameworks could incentivise these issuers to prefer bills over longer-duration instruments, helping to smooth fiscal financing. Stablecoins are redefining the interface between digital currency networks and the time‑tested Treasury market, leaving policymakers to navigate a complex balance between innovation, stability and monetary control.


The National
an hour ago
- The National
US and Chinese trade negotiators to meet in London
The US and China will hold talks in London on Monday in an attempt to preserve a fragile truce on trade. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer are to lead the delegation from Washington. Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, who led his country's negotiating team in Geneva in May, is also at the head of Beijing's team in London. "The meeting should go very well," US President Donald Trump said in a post on his Truth Social platform. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News on Sunday that "we want China and the United States to continue moving forward with the agreement that was struck in Geneva". While the government of UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has repeated it is not involved in the content of the discussions, a representative said: "We are a nation that champions free trade." UK authorities "have always been clear that a trade war is in nobody's interests, so we welcome these talks", the representative added. The talks in London come a matter of days after Mr Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping held their first publicly announced phone call since the Republican returned to the White House. Mr Trump said the call, which took place on Thursday, reached a "very positive conclusion". Mr Xi was quoted by state-run news agency Xinhua as saying that "correcting the course of the big ship of Sino-US relations requires us to steer well and set the direction". The call came after tensions between the countries had soared, with Mr Trump accusing Beijing of breaching a tariff de-escalation deal reached in Geneva in May. "We need China to comply with their side of the deal. And so that's what the trade team will be discussing" in London, Ms Leavitt said. In April, Mr Trump introduced sweeping worldwide tariffs that hit China hardest. At one point, the US imposed levies on China of 145 per cent, as both sides engaged in tit-for-tat escalation. China's countermeasures on US goods reached 125 per cent. After two days of talks in Switzerland, the two sides agreed to reduce their tariffs for 90 days. But differences over certain issues have persisted, including China's restrictions on the export of rare earth minerals used in tech products. The impact of the tariffs was reflected in the latest official export data released on Monday in Beijing. Exports to the US fell by 12.7 per cent in May, with China shipping $28.8 billion worth in goods. This was down from $33 billion in April, China's General Administration of Customs has said. Throughout talks with the US, China has opened discussions with other trading partners, including Japan and South Korea, in an effort to build a united front to counter Mr Trump's tariffs. On Thursday, Beijing turned to Canada, with the two sides agreeing to regularise channels of communication after a period of strained ties. China is expected to host a summit with the EU in July, marking 50 years since Beijing and Brussels established diplomatic ties.


Zawya
2 hours ago
- Zawya
ECB's Escriva sees scope for minor monetary policy easing
MADRID - The path of monetary policy easing in the euro zone could require further adjustments if the current macroeconomic and inflation outlooks are confirmed, ECB policymaker Jose Luis Escriva said. Last week, the ECB cut interest rates and hinted at a pause after inflation in the euro zone returned to its 2% target. Escriva, who is also Bank of Spain Governor, said in an interview to newspaper El Pais on Sunday that he "was very comfortable" with the current, gradual approach of successive 25-basis-point rate cuts. "Our central scenario – GDP growth of around 1%, inflation of 2% – could require some fine-tuning if it is confirmed," Escriva. The ECB has cut rates 2 percentage points since last June, to prop up a euro zone economy also hit by erratic U.S. economic and trade policies. Escriva said confidence in the dollar and U.S. assets had decreased since U.S. President Donald Trump took office and that since April, the dollar had not been a "safe haven" and its dominance as a global reserve currency appeared to have peaked. He also said the Bank of Spain was expected to revise downwards on Tuesday the forecast for Spanish economic growth by a few decimal points from the current 2.7% for 2025.