It looked like the JSE rebounded in June

The local bourse rallied strongly in June, dragging itself back into positive territory for the first half of the year. Picture: Timothy Bernard

The local bourse rallied strongly in June, dragging itself back into positive territory for the first half of the year. Picture: Timothy Bernard

Published Jul 9, 2023

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By Peter Little

The local bourse rallied strongly in June (FTSE/JSE Capped SWIX Index +3.8% MoM), dragging itself back into positive territory for the first half of the year (+3.7% YTD). Companies geared to the domestic economy were the strongest performers, with the banks (+13% MoM), insurers (+11% MoM), general retailers (+13% MoM) and discretionary retailers (+17% MoM) all delivering double-digit returns in June. While this June rally was enough to drag the bulk of the domestically focused companies into positive territory YTD, the retailers (arguably hardest hit by the country’s electricity supply challenges) ended 1H23 with their share prices down in aggregate.

The rand bounced back from its 7.3% MoM collapse in May, rallying by 4.7% against the US dollar in June as the prospect of sanctions related to allegations of supplying arms to Russia receded.

Miners were the biggest drag on the local bourse's performance (-9% MoM), primarily due to the precious metal miners. Platinum miners (-21% MoM) continued to be one of the weakest parts of the local market (-36% YTD), with platinum and palladium prices down 9% MoM and 10% MoM, respectively, in June and the rhodium price down 38% MoM, having lost almost two-thirds of its value YTD. Gold miners (-15% MoM) gave back some of their impressive YTD gains in June, but despite this, they are still responsible for half of FTSE/JSE Capped SWIX performance in 1H23.

South Africa’s (SA’s) latest inflation data for May fell for the second consecutive month (6.3% YoY), coming in below expectations, while the core inflation basket (5.2% YoY) also saw price gains slow slightly. Inflation remains above the South African Reserve Bank’s (SARB’s) 4.5% target, and investors anticipate that the SARB will need to increase rates by c. 0.5% over the next few months as it continues to fight inflation.

SA’s 10-year government bond yield fell by 0.7% during June, leaving it at 11.8% at month-end, still extremely elevated relative to history but below the panic level it got to in May around the time of peak concern related to allegations of SA supplying weapons to Russia.

Peter Little is a Fund Manager at Anchor Capital

** The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of Independent Media or IOL.

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