JOHANNESBURG: South Africa's rand touched a 16-month high against the dollar on Tuesday afternoon, helped by manufacturing figures that were far stronger than expected.
At 1555 GMT, the rand was at 13.9825 against the dollar, 0.25% stronger than its previous close.
The rand moved below 14 to the dollar for the first time since early January 2020 on Monday and posted further gains on Tuesday.
Factors driving it higher include strong prices for metals the country exports, expectations that US interest rates will not rise any time soon and signs that reform-minded President Cyril Ramaphosa is asserting his authority in the governing party.
Manufacturing output rose 4.6% year on year in March, data showed on Tuesday, outperforming the 0.45% increase forecast in a Reuters poll.
Government bonds firmed slightly, with the yield on the 2030 instrument dipping 2 basis points to 8.96%.
But the Johannesburg Stock Exchange posted its biggest daily percentage fall in three weeks, with some investors concerned about rising US Treasury yields.
The all-share index shed 1.66% to 67,241 points and the blue-chip index fell 1.71% to 61,320.
"If US risk-free government bonds slowly reach 2% then why would you go to emerging market stocks and take all the risk? ...it is this sort of fear that occasionally grips the market," said Greg Davies, a trader at Cratos Capital.
Banks fell less than most, with the banking index down 0.4%. Mining and industrials fell 2.6% and 1.7%, respectively.
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