South African rand slips on risk aversion before manufacturing PMI, car sales data

(Reuters) – The South African rand slipped in early trade on Wednesday, pressured ​by global risk aversion tied to fading ‌prospects of a permanent U.S.-Iran peace deal, while traders awaited a local manufacturing purchasing managers’ ​index and vehicle sales data for ​June.


The Reuters Daily Briefing newsletter provides all the news you need to start your day. Sign up here.
At 0709 GMT the rand traded ⁠at 16.44 against the dollar , about 0.4% ​weaker than its previous close.
An Absa PMI ​survey is set to be released at 0900 GMT and will shed light on manufacturing conditions ​in Africa’s most industrialised economy.


The nation’s ​factory sentiment eased in May as activity and demand ‌slowed, ⁠though it remained in expansionary territory for a second consecutive month.


Investors will then turn their focus to vehicle sales (ZAVEHY=ECI), opens new tab data ​due around ​1200 GMT, ⁠which will give a snapshot of consumer demand for big-ticket ​items. Car sales rose 12.8% in ​May.
On ⁠the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, the Top-40 index (.JTOPI), opens new tab was down 1% in early trade.
South Africa’s ⁠benchmark ​2035 government bond also ​weakened, with the yield rising 6 basis points to ​8.355%.
Reporting by Sfundo Parakozov; Editing by Shri Navaratnam

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.