South African stocks are having their strongest third quarter for 11 years, and investors see the gains extending.
The FTSE/JSE Africa All Share Index is up around 10% over the three months, notching 13 record closing highs in the process and outpacing a rally in MSCI’s gauge of emerging-market equities.
China-exposed tech investor Naspers has led the advance, soaring as authorities in Beijing take steps to stimulate the economy. Banks have also driven the main index higher, buoyed by optimism that falling interest rates and a market-friendly broad coalition government will boost growth.
“The start of the global interest rate cutting cycle is a welcome relief and we are continuing to find good valuation support for a number of high-quality companies,” said Peter Takaendesa, head of equities at Mergence Investment Managers.
The so-called government of national unity, installed after May’s election, has spurred hopes of fixes for the energy and transportation problems that have hobbled the economy. Meanwhile, the Reserve Bank cut rates for the first time since 2020 on 19 September as inflation slows.
“Despite strong gains, we see further room for outperformance, aided by front-loading of rate cuts,” Goldman Sachs Group strategists including Kamakshya Trivedi wrote in a note, referring to the outlook for South African equities.
Overwhelmingly upbeat
Investor sentiment is overwhelmingly upbeat. Bank of America’s September South Africa fund manager survey found that a record percentage of respondents expect meaningful government reforms, supporting the rand and encouraging monetary-policy easing.
“A strong 67% of managers believe local equities are undervalued, signalling potential growth opportunities,” John Morris, a South Africa strategist at BofA, wrote in a note. The rest see value in bonds.
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Preferred stock sectors include those linked to the domestic economy, such as banks, fashion retailers and general companies, according to the survey. The outlook is less positive for chemicals, platinum miners and real estate.
To be sure, some market participants say it’s premature to turn too optimistic about China. Moreover, the South African index’s 14-day relative strength index is trading at overbought levels, viewed by some as an indicator of impending weakness. — Khuleko Siwele, with Colleen Goko and Christian Dass, (c) 2024 Bloomberg LP