South Africa's rand rallied more than 1% to its firmest in nearly a week on Wednesday on optimism the central bank has room to boost the flagging economy after consumer inflation fell more than expected, while stocks gained.
At 1525 GMT the rand was 0.91% firmer at 15.23 per dollar after opening at 15.3725, a chunk of those gains coming after the data showed July consumer prices slowed to 4%, the lowest since January.
The subdued price growth reignited bets the Reserve Bank (SARB) may reduce rates again after a 25 basis point cut to 6.5% in July, giving a boost to companies and consumers.
A sharp slump in the rand, about 10% since the beginning of August, and fears of a global growth recession had all but extinguished the chances of a cut. "Repeated signs of inflation moderating during the third and fourth quarter of 2019 should present the SARB an opportunity to rejoin the global easing bandwagon," research analyst at FXTM Lukman Otunuga said in a note.
Africa's most industrialised economy contracted by 3.2% in the first quarter as nationwide power cuts by the ailing utility Eskom hit mining, manufacturing and retailers.
With companies struggling to eke out profits as strained consumers cut spending and face a weak growth outlook and continued political uncertainty, monetary stimulus by a typically cautious central bank may be the only short-term solution the country has. "The SARB is likely to retain a cautious policy stance in view of the recent rand depreciation and persistent vulnerability of a sovereign credit rating downgrade," said Kamilla Kaplan of Investec.