INVESTMENT NOTE TRADE WAR RUMBLINGS AND THE RAND S RETREAT 25 JUNE 2018 DAVE MOHR & IZAK ODENDAAL, OLD MUTUAL MULTI-MANAGERS

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INVESTMENT NOTE TRADE WAR RUMBLINGS AND THE RAND S RETREAT DAVE MOHR & IZAK ODENDAAL, OLD MUTUAL MULTI-MANAGERS

WEALTH INTELLIGENCE WEEKLY INVESTMENT NOTE TRADE WAR RUMBLINGS AND THE RAND S RETREAT There s an old saying in markets that when the US sneezes, the rest of the world catches a cold. When the US throws punches, markets can get bruised. US President Trump announced that tariffs would now be implemented against $50 billion of Chinese imports to punish China for alleged unfair trade practices. China s predictable retaliation led to Trump calling for an additional tranche of tariffs on another $200 billion of goods. This caused renewed jitters on global equity markets, effectively nipping a promising rally in the bud. The US imports around $500 billion in goods from China annually, and exports only around $130 billion to China. American exports to China account for less than 1% of US GDP, while Chinese exports to the US accounts for around 4% of Chinese GDP. What the trade balance numbers don t capture is the substantial presence American multinationals have in China, with billions of dollars in sales to Chinese consumers. General Motors (GM), for instance, sells more cars in China than in the US. These cars don t count towards US exports as they are made in China, but the revenues accrue to GM shareholders. Arguably, the bigger impact of the tariffs is not directly on trade volumes, but more the uncertainty it creates for businesses with complex value chains that span across several countries. A further escalation of the trade dispute would be negative for the US and Chinese economies, and by implication the world economy. Therefore it is in the interests of both countries to step back from the brink. In the US, there is a strong free trade lobby in the Republican Party with mid-term elections looming in November. While China s government is not democratically accountable, it is also not worried about winning elections and can take a longerterm view. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, the imposition of large tit-for-tat tariff increases worsened the global slump, but then policymakers were desperately searching for a way of stimulating domestic activity. Currently, however, both these economies are humming along nicely, and neither need protective tariffs. RAND STUMBLES Predictably amid the market jitters over trade wars and the selling pressure on emerging market assets, the rand took a further beating last week. It almost touched R14 to the US dollar. The fact that it has now weakened 15% against the dollar since President Ramaphosa was sworn in is clearly not because his attempts at stabilising government and the economy are failing (it is simply too early to tell). Rather, it reflects global conditions. The rand has sold off in line with other emerging market economies amid large scale capital outflows from these markets. Why are the rand and South African markets in general so exposed to global market developments? There are three broad reasons. Firstly, emerging markets are increasingly integrated into global markets. As Financial Times commentator John Authers put it last week, emerging markets have developed and consolidated in many important ways since the wave of crises in the 1990s, and the disaster of 2008, but one fact remains. A large proportion of their shares and bonds, and particularly of the free float of shares, remains in the hands of foreign investors. That makes them geared to changing emotions within the developed world. When these investors are nervous, they tend to reduce exposure to relatively risky emerging markets. South Africa with its resource dependence has always been sensitive to the global cycle, but our broader economy has increasingly integrated with the world economy since the end of isolation in the early 1990s. Secondly, our bond and equity markets specifically have integrated into global markets. They are deep and liquid and foreigners face no restrictions buying and selling (unlike locals, who are restricted by capital controls and prudential regulation). Relative to the size of the economy, our bond and equity markets are larger than our peers. The rand is also one of the most freely traded currencies in the world. According to the Bank for International Settlements Triennial Survey, the rand was number 20 in terms of world forex market turnover, ahead of larger economies such as Poland, Taiwan and Indonesia. Being one of the more liquid currencies, the rand tends to be in the front of the queue when global investors sell out of emerging markets. CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT SURPRISINGLY LARGE The third reason is that South Africa needs foreign capital flows as it runs a large current account deficit. Again relative to the size our economy, our current account deficit is large compared to other emerging markets. New data from the SA Reserve Bank showed that the current account deficit had widened by more than expected in the first quarter, increasing from 2.9% to 4.8% of GDP. This was largely due to the trade balance switching from surplus to deficit as the value of exports fell more than that of imports. The former was due both to lower export volumes and the stronger rand in the first quarter. The deficit on the services, income and transfer account remains the largest driver of the current account, 2

with the trade balance being quite volatile from quarter to quarter. It was slightly smaller than in the first quarter, as dividend inflows from abroad exceeded dividend outflows during the quarter, but remains very sticky around 4.3% of GDP. The current account balance is the broadest measures of a country s economic engagement with the rest of the world. It tracks the net flows of imports and exports (the trade balance), the net flows of services payments, (such as cross border insurance) and tourism spending. It also tracks the net income flows (dividend and interest payments) of bonds and equities owned by foreigners in South Africa and by locals abroad. The other way to think about the current account deficit is that it reflects the shortfall of savings relative to investments. South Africans don t generate enough savings across the household, business and government sectors to fund investment in the economy, so we need to import savings. This happens mostly in the form of foreigners buying our bonds and equities, which as we ve seen, they can sell in a hurry. INFLATION STILL SURPRISINGLY LOW In other words, there are benefits to a weaker economy, but the main cost is higher inflation. The rand weakness, if sustained, should place some upward pressure on imported prices, but the overall influence of the exchange rate on inflation has diminished in recent years. May inflation was once again surprisingly low, falling to 4.4% from 4.5% in April, while the market expected an increase to 4.6%. This was despite petrol price hikes in April and May and the VAT increase, as higher fuel inflation was offset by declining food inflation. Excluding the impact of both volatile food and fuel prices, core inflation was also 4.4%. This is a truer measure of underlying price pressures in the economy, and these are clearly still subdued. In the current environment, companies are simply not in a position to push through large price increases. WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR INVESTORS? The exchange rate should not be seen as the share price of South Africa, with a weak rand signalling domestic troubles. Investors should rather view the exchange rate as an important adjustment mechanism for the domestic economy. A weaker rand not only supports export value, but also boosts the values of South Africans substantial foreign asset basses. The Reserve Bank also reported that South Africa had a positive net international investment position of R562 billion in the first quarter, as the value of foreign assets exceed foreign liabilities. The economy therefore has a large built-in rand hedge. This extends to local investors, and typical diversified portfolios should on balance benefit from a weaker rand. Specifically, our funds have substantial rand hedge exposures, directly through global equities and property and indirectly through JSE-listed companies with global operations. CHART 1: EMERGING MARKET CURRENCIES AGAINST THE US DOLLAR, INDEXED TO 100 130 125 120 115 110 105 100 95 90 South Africa Rand Brazilian Real Indian Rupee Turkish Lira Russian Rouble 01-01-2018 01-02-2018 01-03-2018 01-04-2018 01-05-2018 01-06-2018 Source: Thomson Reuters Datastream CHART 2: SOUTH AFRICA CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE, % OF GDP 2 1 0-1 -2-3 -4-5 -6-7 -8 Q4 1999 Q2 2000 Q4 2000 Q2 2001 Q4 2001 Q2 2002 Q4 2002 Q2 2003 Q4 2003 Q2 2004 Q4 2004 Q2 2005 Q4 2005 Q2 2006 Q4 2006 Q2 2007 Q4 2007 Q2 2008 Q4 2008 Q2 2009 Q4 2009 Q2 2010 Q4 2010 Q2 2011 Q4 2011 Q2 2012 Q4 2012 Q2 2013 Q4 2013 Q2 2014 Q4 2014 Q2 2015 Q4 2015 Q2 2016 Q4 2016 Q2 2017 Q4 2017 Source: SA Reserve Bank CHART 3: SOUTH AFRICA NET INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT POSITION (VALUE OF FOREIGN ASSETS MINUS TOTAL FOREIGN LIABILITIES), R BILLION 800 600 400 200 0-200 -400 01-06-2008 01-10-2008 01-02-2009 01-06-2009 01-10-2009 01-02-2010 01-06-2010 01-10-2010 01-02-2011 01-06-2011 01-10-2011 01-02-2012 01-06-2012 01-10-2012 01-02-2013 01-06-2013 01-10-2013 01-02-2014 01-06-2014 01-10-2014 01-02-2015 01-06-2015 01-10-2015 01-02-2016 01-06-2016 01-10-2016 01-02-2017 01-06-2017 01-10-2017 Source: SA Reserve Bank 3

EQUITIES - GLOBAL Global MSCI World US$ 2 106.0-1.31% 0.62% 0.14% 9.57% United States S&P 500 US$ 2 755.0-0.90% 1.85% 3.03% 13.10% Europe MSCI Europe US$ 1 696.0-2.19% -1.22% -5.62% 1.80% Britain FTSE 100 US$ 10 191.0 0.55% -0.16% -2.02% 8.05% Germany DAX US$ 1 387.0-2.67% -0.50% -1.93% 5.96% Japan Nikkei 225 US$ 204.7-0.90% 0.35% 1.32% 13.11% Emerging Markets MSCI Emerging Markets US$ 1 080.0-3.05% -3.66% -6.74% 7.04% Brazil MSCI Brazil US$ 1 609.0-1.23% -10.56% -20.46% -2.25% China MSCI China US$ 89.4-3.79% -2.18% 0.99% 22.87% India MSCI India US$ 567.0-1.07% -0.17% -7.20% 5.01% South Africa MSCI South Africa US$ 491.0-3.54% -7.18% -18.84% 0.82% EQUITIES - SOUTH AFRICA (TR UNLESS INDICATED OTHERWISE) All Share (Capital Only) All Share (Capital Index) Rand 56 857.0-1.39% 1.24% -4.45% 11.32% All Share All Share (Total Return) Rand 8 194.0-1.30% 1.40% -3.03% 14.70% TOP 40/Large Caps Top 40 Rand 7 277.0-1.30% 1.76% -2.30% 15.89% Mid Caps Mid Cap Rand 15 411.0-1.29% -0.70% -9.21% 5.80% Small Companies Small Cap Rand 19 829.0-2.09% -3.27% -5.68% 1.08% Resources Resource 20 Rand 2 607.7-1.71% 2.41% 14.06% 43.82% Industrials Industrial 25 Rand 14 328.0-1.12% 3.47% -5.21% 7.50% Financials Financial 15 Rand 8 972.0-1.07% -2.77% -7.57% 18.66% Listed Property SA Listed Property Rand 1 926.7-3.09% -4.00% -21.81% -10.72% FIXED INTEREST - GLOBAL Global Government Bonds Citi Group WGBI US$ 937.3-0.12% -0.28% -1.14% 1.40% FIXED INTEREST - SOUTH AFRICA All Bond BESA ALBI Rand 609.2 1.36% -1.51% 3.66% 8.73% Government Bonds BESA GOVI Rand 604.4 1.43% -1.65% 3.09% 8.13% Corporate Bonds SB JSE Credit Indices Rand 113.6-1.79% -4.76% -9.95% -18.48% Inflation Linked Bonds BESA CILI Rand 251.8-0.44% -1.81% -0.33% 1.30% Cash STEFI Composite Rand 396.1 0.13% 0.42% 3.43% 7.36% COMMODITIES Brent Crude Oil Brent Crude ICE US$ 75.7 3.61% -2.94% 13.00% 64.59% Gold Gold Spot US$ 1 270.0-0.70% -2.68% -2.08% 1.52% Platinum Platinum Spot US$ 877.0-0.90% -3.94% -5.70% -5.39% CURRENCIES ZAR/Dollar ZAR/USD Rand 13.42 0.05% -5.40% -7.78% -3.31% ZAR/Pound ZAR/GBP Rand 17.81 0.17% -5.17% -6.01% -7.69% ZAR/Euro ZAR/EUR Rand 15.65-0.32% -5.11% -5.05% -7.54% Dollar/Euro USD/EUR US$ 1.17-0.85% -0.09% 2.65% -4.27% Dollar/Pound USD/GBP US$ 1.33 0.08% 0.26% 1.76% -4.27% Dollar/Yen USD/JPY US$ 0.01-0.57% 1.07% -2.38% -1.01% Source: I-Net, figures as at 22 June 2018 4

THE WEEK AHEAD SOUTH AFRICA Trade balance Credit growth Fiscal balance Producer inflation US New home sales House prices Consumer confidence Durable goods orders EUROPE Eurozone loan growth Eurozone economic sentiment Eurozone inflation JAPAN Retail sales Industrial production Unemployment rate The Old Mutual Wealth Investment Note is published on a weekly basis to keep our clients and financial planners informed of what is happening in financial markets and the economy and to share our insights. Markets are often very volatile in the short term and similarly, economic data releases or central bank actions may cause concerns for investors. This does not mean that investors should take action based on the most recent events. It is better to be disciplined and remain invested in well-diversified portfolios that are designed to achieve long-term objectives. Our Strategy Funds are actively managed, with asset allocation changes based on valuations and in anticipation of future real returns, and not in response to the most recent market noise. The future is always uncertain and that is why our Strategy Funds are diversified and managed with a long-term focus. Old Mutual Wealth is brought to you through several authorised Financial Services Providers in the Old Mutual Group who make up the elite service offering. This document is for information purposes only and does not constitute financial advice in any way or form. It is important to consult a financial planner to receive financial advice before acting on any information contained herein. Old Mutual Wealth and its directors, officers and employees shall not be responsible and disclaims all liability for any loss, damage (whether direct, indirect, special or consequential) and/or expense of any nature whatsoever, which may be suffered as a result of or which may be attributable, directly or indirectly, to the use of, or reliance upon any information contained in this document. 5