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In the loop 02 July 2026

In the loop

Shireen Darmalingam

What you should know this morning:

  • The rand is stronger this morning, at R16.39/$, after closing weaker yesterday (R16.40/$*).
  • EM currencies were mixed yesterday; the COP (+1.4%) and RUB (+1.1%) were the biggest gainers; the BRL (-0.9%), INR (-0.6%) and THB (-0.5%) were the biggest losers.
  • Asian equity markets are mixed this morning; the Nikkei and Shanghai Composite are down, while the Hang Seng is up.
 
  • Iran war: US and Iranian officials held indirect technical talks in Doha under Qatari and Pakistani mediation.
  • The discussions were aimed at consolidating the June ceasefire arrangement, reopening commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, and laying the groundwork for a broader peace agreement.
  • Both sides have reported “positive progress”.
 
  • ECB Forum: ECB President Christine Lagarde remarked that risks to both inflation and economic growth in the Eurozone have become more balanced following the recent decline in energy prices. 
  • Lagarde noted that, with oil prices falling to around $72/bbl in June, from around $120/bbl in March, policymakers should be prepared to use a broader range of tools to assess price developments. 
  • ECB Vice President Boris Vujcic added that the ECB could wait until updated macroeconomic projections are released in September before deciding on its next policy move.
 
  • BOE Governor Andrew Bailey cautioned that it is premature to consider interest rate cuts at the next policy meeting.
  • He warned that households have yet to experience the full economic impact of the Iran conflict. 
  • Bailey said reductions in borrowing costs are currently “off the table”, despite easing inflation risks following the sharp decline in energy prices. 
  • He also warned of a delayed pass-through effect from the conflict due to the UK's energy price cap, which limits the amount suppliers can charge households for gas and electricity.
 
  • US Fed Chair Kevin Warsh yesterday noted that risks to the inflation outlook have eased in recent weeks. 
  • He reiterated his commitment to returning inflation to the central bank's 2% target and stressed the Fed's independence in determining the appropriate policy path.
  • Warsh emphasised that the Fed remains focused on delivering price stability and repeated that he would not provide any forward guidance on upcoming interest rate decisions. 
  • He added that the central bank would chart its own course based on incoming economic data.
 
  • The US non-farm payrolls for June are due for release today; payrolls are expected to have increased by 113k in June, after having increased by 172k in May.
  • Government jobs are expected to make a substantial contribution, as well as healthcare and education.
  • The unemployment rate is likely to have remained unchanged, at 4.3%.
  • Factory orders are likely to have fallen by 2.0% m/m in May, following a 4.8% m/m increase in April.
 
  • Locally, the electricity production and consumption release for May is due for release today.
 
  • Brent crude is down this morning, and up by 16.5% year-to-date.
  • The gold price is up this morning, and down by 6.2% year-to-date.
 
  • Brent crude oil is currently at $70.88/bbl; ($71.57/bbl*).
  • Gold is at $4053/oz ($4030/oz*).
  • SA CDS 126bps*, Brazil 125bps* and Turkey 223bps*.
  • Yields: US 10yr at 4.47%*, German bund at 2.87%*, SA 10-year generic at 8.41%*, SA's R2035 at 8.24%*.
 

* Denotes yesterday's close. 

Key events and data:

  • 11h00: Eurozone unemployment rate (May)
  • 13h00: SA electricity production and consumption (May)
  • 14h30: US non-farm payrolls (June), unemployment rate (June), average hourly earnings (June), initial jobless claims (27 June)
  • 16h00: US factory orders (May), durable goods orders (May – final)
 

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