The rand rallied to below R13,60/US$ during National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) boss Shaun Abrahams’ lengthy speech ahead of his announcement that charges have been dropped against finance minister Pravin Gordhan and his two co-accused, Oupa Magashula and Ivan Pillay.
Abrahams made the announcement during an impromptu press briefing held by the NPA at its head office in Silverton. Gordhan was previously expected to appear in the Pretoria regional court on 2 November on charges of fraud.
Ahead of the briefing, the rand had strengthened, trading at R13,81/$ on Monday morning when markets opened. This is close to levels recorded on 10 October before the NPA announced plans to charge Gordhan.
On 11 October, when the NPA announced it would charge Gordhan, former South African Revenue Service commissioner Magashula and former deputy commissioner Pillay for fraud, the rand crashed to R14,36 against the dollar.
The rand traded as high as R13,58 against the greenback during Abrahams’ speech and by 11.42am, the local unit was trading at R13,63/$. That is 1,5% firmer than the unit’s previous close.
The rand has been trading on the front foot for most of the morning and started rallying as it became clear the charges would be withdrawn against the trio.
Abrahams lamented Gordhan’s refusal to make representations to the NPA, and said Magashula and Pillay received a fair hearing.