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In the loop 13 October 2025

In the loop

Shireen Darmalingam

What you should know this morning:

  • The rand is trading at R17.34/$ this morning, after closing weaker on Friday (R17.50/$*).
  • EM currencies were mixed on Friday; the BRL (-2.8%), ZAR (-1.7%) and KRW (-1.3%) were the biggest losers; the CZK (+0.7%), RON (+0.6%) and BGN (+0.6%) were the biggest gainers.
  • Asian equity markets, the Nikkei, Hang Seng and Shanghai Composite, are down.
 
  • Central bank governors and finance ministers are gathering in Washington for the IMF and World Bank Annual Meetings which will continue until 18 October.
 
  • China’s trade, inflation and credit data will be among the key releases in the week ahead.
  • Export growth likely strengthened as increased shipments to non-US markets offset a decline in exports to the US.
  • Both producer and consumer prices are expected to have fallen at a slower pace in September.
  • China’s credit growth may have eased amid reduced local government bond issuance and subdued loan demand.
 
  • UK labour market data, due tomorrow, will be closely watched by the BOE.
  • The figures are expected to show further signs of stabilisation in employment, alongside a continued moderation in wage growth.
  • The BOE is widely anticipated to keep its benchmark interest rate unchanged later this month.
  • UK monthly GDP data for August, set for release on Thursday, is likely to reinforce evidence of a slowdown emerging in the second half of 2025.
  • In the Eurozone, the final CPI reading for September is expected to confirm that headline inflation rose to 2.2% y/y.
  • The detailed breakdown should offer clearer insight into the underlying drivers of services inflation.
 
  • As the US government shutdown extends into its third week, several key economic releases, including CPI, PPI and retail sales, will be delayed.
  • The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) announced last week that it would recall some staff to publish the September CPI report on 24 October.
  • In the absence of major data, attention will turn to other releases such as the Beige Book and the NFIB small business optimism index.
  • The Beige Book is expected to show sluggish employment growth and signs of consumer resistance to higher prices.
  • The NFIB index likely edged down to 100.5 in September, from 100.8 in August.
  • The Empire manufacturing index, due out on Wednesday, is expected to have improved to around zero in October, after -8.7 in September.
 
  • Locally, August mining production data will be released tomorrow and is expected to show a 1.7% y/y increase, following a 3.4% y/y rise in July.
  • On a m/m basis, mining output grew by 1.0% in July.
  • The SACCI business confidence index for September is also due tomorrow.
  • Confidence rose to a four-month high in July, reflecting a somewhat improved operating environment despite ongoing tariff risks.
  • August retail sales data, scheduled for release on Wednesday, are expected to show a 3.7% m/m increase, after a robust 5.6% m/m increase in July.
 
  • Brent crude is up this morning, and down by 11.3% year-to-date.
  • The gold price is up this morning, and up by 55.2% year-to-date.
 
  • Brent crude oil is currently at $63.70/bbl; ($62.73/bbl*).
  • Gold is at $4074/oz ($4018/oz*).
  • SA CDS 171bps*, Brazil 153bps* and Turkey 265bps*.
  • Yields: US 10yr at 4.03%*, German bund at 2.64%*, SA 10-year generic at 9.19%*, SA’s R2035 at 9.08%*.
 

* Denotes Friday’s close.

Key events and data:

  • No major data releases
 

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