South African Rand Slightly Firmer

2026-06-30 15:10 By Luisa Carvalho 1 min. read

The South African rand edged up toward 16.4 per USD, the highest since mid-June, mainly benefiting from a slight rise in prices of key precious metals.

Meanwhile, traders digested fresh domestic data showing inflation expectations rose sharply in the second quarter.

However, the survey was conducted before the signing of the US-Iran agreement that reopened the Strait of Hormuz, which sent global energy costs sharply lower and set the stage for a steep decline in domestic fuel prices.

The implicit risk of second round effects complicates the central bank’s efforts to anchor inflation expectations around the 3% target.

In the meantime, the South African government has announced a reduction in petrol and diesel prices in July, the first decrease in several months, offering some relief to the inflation outlook.

Attention was also on anti-immigration demonstrations across South Africa for any potential disruptions to economic activity.



News Stream
South African Rand Slightly Firmer
The South African rand edged up toward 16.4 per USD, the highest since mid-June, mainly benefiting from a slight rise in prices of key precious metals. Meanwhile, traders digested fresh domestic data showing inflation expectations rose sharply in the second quarter. However, the survey was conducted before the signing of the US-Iran agreement that reopened the Strait of Hormuz, which sent global energy costs sharply lower and set the stage for a steep decline in domestic fuel prices. The implicit risk of second round effects complicates the central bank’s efforts to anchor inflation expectations around the 3% target. In the meantime, the South African government has announced a reduction in petrol and diesel prices in July, the first decrease in several months, offering some relief to the inflation outlook. Attention was also on anti-immigration demonstrations across South Africa for any potential disruptions to economic activity.
2026-06-30
South African Rand Hovers Around 16.5 per USD
The South African rand has traded around 16.5 per USD since April, amid a resilient US dollar and heightened volatility in key precious metals, particularly gold and PGMs. This has been largely attributed to the Middle East conflict, which has contributed to increased global uncertainty and reinforced safe-haven demand for the greenback. Meanwhile, progress in US–Iran negotiations triggered a sharp decline in oil prices, helping to ease inflationary pressures. While this improves South Africa’s inflation outlook, SARB Governor Lesetja Kganyago has warned that further rate hikes remain possible. He said that the US–Iran deal still leaves considerable uncertainty, noting that oil prices are unlikely to return to pre-conflict levels soon and that higher fertilizer costs could spill over into food prices during the harvest in the second half of the year. Attention now shifts to the upcoming release of Q2 inflation expectations to gauge the extent of inflationary pressures in the economy.
2026-06-26
South African Rand at Over 1-Month Low
The South African rand traded around 16.6 per USD, the lowest level since May 19, pressured by a firmer dollar and falling prices of key precious metals, particularly gold and PGMs. Investors sought the safety of the greenback amid volatility sparked by a tech stock selloff and rising expectations of Federal Reserve rate hikes, while a US–Iran peace agreement eased inflation concerns. On the domestic front, South African Reserve Bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago said policymakers are seeing early signs of second-round inflation effects and emphasized the need to act. Kganyago clarified the central bank’s May rate hike of 25 basis points to 7% was taken without updated inflation expectations, noting that they are now available and have drifted away from the target. He noted that the US-Iran deal still left considerable uncertainty, adding that while oil flows have resumed, prices are unlikely to fall back to pre-conflict levels soon.
2026-06-24