Stocks put in modest gains in line with global peers, with the benchmark Top 40 index adding 0.26 percent to 44,920. while the wider All-share index ended 0.35 percent higher at 51,276.
The rand took in its stride a warning from Moody’s that South Africa was the most exposed in the sub-Saharan Africa region to market volatility linked to Britain’s decision to leave the European Union.
This was in spite of stronger-than-expected non-farm payrolls numbers out of the United States, which however left investors still unconvinced that the Federal Reserve would raise interest rates this year.
“Global markets still don’t believe that the U.S. is actually going to hike anything this year, so it’s still going to be very much a low interest environment globally,” Treasury One dealer Phillip Pearce said.
“So the whole game at the moment is just trying to seek yield.”
South African debt also ended the day higher as a result, with the yield for the 2026 benchmark shedding 6 basis points to 8.71 percent.
Goldman Sachs also said it expected gold equities to generally outperform and said AngloGold Ashanti had “upside potential” as it saw “a likelihood of the company reinstating a dividend and/or revisiting the possibility of splitting its international and South African operations.”
AngloGold closed 1.6 percent higher at 298.47 rand.
Spot gold has been putting in a strong run and has risen about 8 percent since Britain voted to quit the EU two weeks ago.
Trading volumes on the JSE securities exchange were however thin, with only around 172 million shares changing hands compared to last year’s average of 296 million.