South African Rand Firmer as ‘Peace Deal’ Shifts Market Sentiment
The South African rand is firmer against the US dollar, the euro, and the British pound in early trading on Monday as the US-Iran deal shifts global market sentiment.
Oil prices declined sharply, with projections indicating a further drop, as investors began to process the agreement between the US and Iran aimed at restoring peace to the Middle East.
In a brief, First National Bank (FNB) said the rand was trading at approximately R16.16 per US dollar, R18.76 per euro, and R21.72 per pound, extending Friday’s gains.
The bank said the primary driver is the US-Iran interim peace deal announced over the weekend, which has broadly lifted emerging market currencies and reduced risk premiums.
Domestically, strong foreign bond inflows, a credit rating upgrade, and the South African Reserve Bank’s (SARB) credible hawkish stance continue to underpin the currency.
Gold has advanced sharply, trading around $4 329/oz, after the US and Iran announced an interim deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
The agreement eases global inflation fears and may temper expectations for further interest rate hikes, removing a key headwind for the non-yielding metal. Asian gold equities have surged in sympathy this morning.
Brent crude is sharply weaker this Monday, tumbling almost 5% towards $83 per barrel after the US-Iran interim deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz was announced over the weekend.
Friday’s settlement was already at a three-month low of $87.33 per barrel, down 6.19% on the week as optimism over a peace deal built.
Analysts caution that while the deal eases supply risk, a full return to normal Hormuz flows could take months, given the time needed to rebuild confidence among shipowners, insurers, and refiners. On the economic calendar, South Africa will hold T-Bill auctions on Monday. South African Rand Little Changed Ahead of Economic Data

