On September 30, 2025, the South African rand fell 0.2% to 17.29 against the dollar by 2:39 PM GMT, down from Monday’s close. Mixed economic reports drove the decline.
Central Bank Data
The South African Reserve Bank reported M3 money supply growth at 6.18% in August, down from 6.75% in July. Private sector credit growth rose slightly to 5.86% from 5.84%, beating forecasts of 5.20%.
FDI and Budget Woes
A quarterly bulletin showed a foreign direct investment outflow of 73.5 billion rand ($4.25 billion) in Q2 2025, reversing Q1’s 11.7 billion rand inflow. The National Treasury reported a 38.35 billion rand budget deficit.
Trade and Jobs
The trade balance recorded a surplus of 3.97 billion rand, far below the expected 18.25 billion rand. Formal sector jobs declined, adding to economic concerns.
Market Movements
The Johannesburg Stock Exchange’s Top-40 index rose 0.7%. In bonds, the yield on 2035 government debt climbed 2.5 basis points to 9.18%.
Why It Matters
The rand’s dip reflects uncertainty from uneven economic signals. Weak FDI and trade data could pressure South Africa’s growth outlook.
What’s Next
Investors will watch for policy responses from the Reserve Bank and Treasury to stabilize the rand and economy in 2025.