The South African rand briefly strengthened below the R16 mark against the US dollar on Monday, gaining 0.8% to trade at R15.9982. The rand has been on a steady recovery over the past year, rebounding from one of its weakest points in 2025 when it traded well above R19 to the dollar. The rand’s recent strength has largely been driven by a weaker US dollar following the return of US President Donald Trump to the White House.
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, a financial benchmark that tracks the performance of a basket of 10 major global currencies against the US dollar, fell about 8% last year amid concerns over a potential tariff war and as the US Federal Reserve began easing interest rates. The greenback has also been pressured by worries over the United States’ growing fiscal deficit, expectations of further rate cuts in 2026, and heightened geopolitical uncertainty linked to US policy positions on Venezuela and Greenland. Several domestic factors have also supported the rand.
Record gold prices and continued political stability have boosted the appeal of South African assets to foreign investors. South Africa’s first sovereign credit rating upgrade in two decades by S&P Global, its removal from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) grey list, and improving economic growth indicators have further strengthened investor confidence. Despite briefly breaking through the key R16 resistance level, the rand’s move proved short-lived, with the currency later edging back above the threshold.
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