Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 27 January 2026
📘 Source: Business Day

After breaching R16 a dollar for the first time since July 2022 on Monday, the rand is entering territory that analysts say could open the door to further strengthening towards R15.50, supported by buoyant commodity prices, bond inflows and improvements in South Africa’s fiscal and credit outlook linked to recent reforms. Rand Swiss senior analyst Shaun Murison said carry-trade opportunities, strong demand for local bonds,rising prices for gold,copper and platinum, a risk-on global environment and continued dollar weakness would support rand gains. Therand’s momentum is reinforced by a surge in precious metal prices, which boost export earnings and strengthen South Africa’s terms of trade.

Gold has powered to record prices above $5,100 an ounce, while platinum and copper have also advanced, lifting foreign-exchange inflows and supporting mining-sector revenues. Annatjie van Rooyen, CEO of Regenesys Investment Fund, said technical analysis indicates the rand could strengthen to between R15.70 a dollar and R15.20 a dollar in the short term, “supported by the dollar weakness which remains underpinned by geopolitical tension between the US and Iran, elevated uncertainty due to unpredictable US policy decisions and anticipated accommodative monetary policy”. Herman Van Papendorp, head of asset allocation at Momentum Investments, said strong gold and platinum prices are attracting global investor interest as alternatives to US treasuries amid uncertainty over the dollar’s safe-haven status.

The currency is also benefiting from a series of domestic developments, including the country’s removal from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF)greylistin late 2025 after reforms to strengthen anti-money-laundering and counter-terrorism financing regulations. In November, S&P Globalupgraded South Africa’s sovereign credit rating, citing a stronger fiscal performance, improved revenue collection and a more stable political environment. Monetary policy has also contributed, with the Reserve Bank lowering its inflation target to 3%, anchoring expectations and allowing for a more accommodative rate environment.

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“The rand also remains supported by bond market inflows as investors seek higher yields and diversification away from US assets, further strengthened by the anticipated path of debt stabilisation, prospects for real economic growth, continued fiscal consolidation, sustained political stability, and increased infrastructure investment,” Van Rooyen said. Rand strength could be further reinforced if tangible progress on domestic reforms accelerates the country’s growth momentum. Van Papendorp said the rand is likely to remain strong for the time being as global flows favour non-US, emerging-market and South African assets, particularly if foreign investors extend last year’s buying of SA bonds into equities.

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Originally published by Business Day • January 27, 2026

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