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In the loop 07 April 2025

In the loop

Shireen Darmalingam

What you should know this morning:

  • The rand is weaker this morning, at R19.19/$, after closing weaker on Friday (R19.13/$*).
  • EM currencies were mixed on Friday; the PHP (+0.5%), INR (+0.2%) and THB (+0.2%) were the biggest gainers; the BRL (-3.6%), CLP (-3.0%) and COP (-2.8%) were the biggest losers.
  • Asian equity markets the Nikkei, Hang Seng and Shanghai Composite are down.
 
  • Central bank watch: the central banks of India, New Zealand, the Philippines and Singapore are expected to ease monetary policy this week to buttress growth. 
  • This comes as policymakers have to deal with sweeping US tariffs that will likely deal a hard blow to the global economy.
 
  • China’s CPI and PPI for March are due for release on Thursday.
  • CPI is expected to have moderated further in March.
 
  • German industrial production for February, scheduled for release today, is likely to have dipped. 
  • This is expected even before the impact of the high US tariffs on auto imports is felt. 
  • The UK monthly GDP data for February, due out on Friday, will likely show economic growth increasing only slightly.
 
  • The meeting minutes of the Fed’s FOMC meeting (18-19 March) is scheduled for release on Wednesday.
  • The markets will keep a close eye on clues for when the FOMC might cut rates again. 
  • The minutes are likely to show that the majority of FOMC policymakers were more worried about the persistence of inflation.
  • Fed Chair Jerome Powell commented in March that the Trump administration’s new tariffs are “significantly larger than expected,” and their inflation impact “could be more persistent”.
  • The US March CPI will be in focus this week (Wednesday) and is likely to come in at 2.6% y/y, from 2.8% y/y in February.
  • On a m/m basis, headline CPI is likely to have increased by 0.1% in March, after having increased by 0.2% in February.
  • The NFIB small business optimism index for March, due out tomorrow, is likely to have slipped to 99.0, from 100.7 in February.
  • PPI for March, out on Friday, is expected at 3.3% y/y, from 3.3% y/y in February.
  • The University of Michigan sentiment index for April is due out on Friday.
  • The sentiment index is likely to have deteriorated to 54.0 in April, from 57,0 in March.
 
  • Locally, the SARB’s gross and net reserves for March are scheduled for release today. 
  • Gross reserves were $66.26bn in February, while net reserves were $61.73bn in February.
  • Manufacturing production for February is due out on Tuesday; production is expected to have declined by 3.1% y/y in February, after having fallen by 3.3% y/y in January. 
  • On a m/m basis, manufacturing production is likely to have decreased by 0.2% in February, following a 0.2% increase in January.
 
  • The SA government has noted that it would not rush into imposing reciprocal tariffs on imports from the US as it would be ill-considered and counterproductive.
  • International Relations Minister Ronald Lamola commented that “SA remains committed to a mutually beneficial trade relationship with the United States”.
  • He added though that punitive tariffs “are a concern and serve as a barrier of trade”.
 
  • Brent crude is down this morning, and down by 13.9% year-to-date.
  • The gold price is up this morning, and up by 16.0% year-to-date.
 
  • Brent crude oil is currently at $64.29/bbl; ($65.58/bbl*).
  • Gold is at $3042/oz ($3038/oz*).
  • SA CDS 273bps*, Brazil 202bps* and Turkey 344bps*.
  • Yields: US 10yr at 3.93%*, German bund at 2.57%*, SA 10-year generic at 11.11%*, SA’s R2035 at 11.09%*.
 

* Denotes Friday's close.

Key events and data: 

  • 08h00: SA gross, net reserves (March)
  • 10h30: Eurozone Sentix investor confidence (April)
  • 11h00: Eurozone retail sales (February)
  • 21h00: US consumer credit (February)
 

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