JOHANNESBURG: South Africa's rand reached its strongest in more than a week to the dollar on Monday, and was still on track to recoup the losses suffered after Britain voted to exit the European, leading to a global risk sell-off. Stocks were firmer for a fourth straight session, boosted by resources companies as investors piled into safe-haven commodities to avoid volatility in Britain politics.
The rand climbed to 14.4600 against the dollar before pulling back in late Johannesburg trade. By 1509 GMT it was at 14.5660 to the greenback, largely in line with Friday's close.
The rand, like other high-yielding emerging market currencies, has regained its footing after the June 23 Brexit vote triggered a stampede from riskier assets, partly buoyed by expectations that global interest rates could remain low for longer than earlier expected.
"Currently, we still see fair value for the rand within the 14.50-15.00 range," Standard Bank analyst Walter De Wet said in a note. "But local event risk remains and we are reluctant to transpose recent strength into the future just yet."
Government bonds also edged up on Monday, with the yield for the benchmark instrument due in 2026 ending the day 1 basis point lower at 8.685 percent.
On the bourse, the Top-40 index rose 0.03 percent to 46,027 points while Johannesburg's All-Share index inched up 0.18 percent to 52,454 points.
Bullion producers Harmony Gold rose 8.8 percent to 59.58 rand while platinum producer Lonmin edged up 7.09 percent to 43.37 rand.
"The major movers are resource stocks on the day but that is to be expected with the uncertainty in Britain. In the short term you will see gold rising as there is a flight to quality," Independent Securities trader Ryan Woods said.
Trade was slow, with 191 million shares changing hands compared to last year's daily average 280 million shares as US markets were closed for July 4 holiday.
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