South African Rand Starts 2026 Steady as Investors Remain on Holiday

JOHANNESBURG, Jan 2 – South Africa’s rand made a steady start to 2026 on Friday, holding firm in subdued holiday trading as many global investors remained away from markets.

At 0739 GMT, the rand traded at 16.5425 per dollar, broadly unchanged from its previous close. The currency ended 2025 nearly 13% stronger against the U.S. dollar, marking its biggest annual gain in 16 years, supported by improved fiscal performance, easing inflation and a weaker greenback.

Market analysts said the muted start to the year reflects low liquidity rather than a shift in sentiment. In a research note, ETM Analytics said the quiet session gives investors time to reassess key themes likely to shape the rand and other emerging market currencies in 2026.

Attention this year is expected to focus on domestic reforms aimed at strengthening South Africa’s logistics and energy sectors. Persistent bottlenecks in both areas have weighed on economic growth in Africa’s most industrialised economy.

ETM Analytics noted that progress on reforms could help attract capital inflows into South Africa’s bond market, a critical driver of rand performance. The firm said sustained bond inflows would be essential to extending last year’s gains and supporting the currency through 2026.

South Africa’s benchmark 2035 government bond was little changed in early trade, with the yield edging up half a basis point to 8.215%.

On the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, the Top-40 index rose 0.7%, tracking firmer global equity sentiment.

Globally, the U.S. dollar opened 2026 on a weak footing, continuing the trend seen at the end of last year. Expectations of U.S. interest rate cuts and concerns over Federal Reserve independence have continued to pressure the currency.

“Rate-cut bets for 2026 remain high, and Fed independence is a further concern, keeping the greenback under pressure,” said Wichard Cilliers, head of market risk at TreasuryONE.