Markets

South African rand gains as dollar wavers amid Middle East tensions

  • The rand traded at 16.5375 ​against the U.S. dollar , up 0.2% from its ​previous close
Published June 11, 2026 Updated June 11, 2026 12:45pm
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JOHANNESBURG: The South African rand gained in early Thursday trade as the US dollar wavered, while renewed ​strikes by Iran and the United States and ‌higher oil prices kept broader risk appetite subdued ahead of key domestic data.

At 0645 GMT, the rand traded at 16.5375 ​against the U.S. dollar , up 0.2% from its ​previous close.

The U.S. and Iran traded air attacks ⁠for a second successive day, with President Donald Trump ​vowing further strikes if Tehran does not immediately agree ​to a peace deal.

The greenback eased slightly against a basket of currencies, and oil prices jumped after Tehran declared the Strait of ​Hormuz closed following the U.S. strikes on Iran.

“Not ​even the overnight geopolitical developments were enough to erode sentiment towards ‌the ⁠rand, leaving it trading within its recent three-day range,” ETM Analytics said in a research note.

Like other risk-sensitive currencies, the rand has been driven largely by ​global market sentiment, ​particularly since ⁠the start of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.

The South African Reserve Bank will ​publish first-quarter current account data at 0900 ​GMT.

Statistics ⁠South Africa will then release April mining output at 0930 GMT and manufacturing production data at 1100 GMT.

South ⁠Africa’s ​benchmark 2035 government bond was ​slightly weaker in early deals, as the yield rose 1 basis point ​to 8.645%.

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