South Africa’s business mood recovers – but now faces Ukraine war risks

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South African business confidence climbed in the first quarter as the negative impact of the coronavirus pandemic, power cuts and a three-week strike in the steel and engineering industry began to wane.

A quarterly business confidence index compiled by FirstRand Ltd.’s Rand Merchant Bank unit and Stellenbosch University’s Bureau for Economic Research increased to 46 from 43 in the three months through December. That equals the index’s long-term average and “is a far cry from the 5-index-point low recorded at the height of the pandemic in 2020,” Johannesburg-based RMB said. The median of four economists’ estimates in a Bloomberg survey was 47.

The biggest boost to sentiment came from new-vehicle dealers. Sales in the first two months of the year have been buoyant and beat economists’ expectations in February. As the lion’s share of results for the survey were submitted before Russia invaded Ukraine and the oil price surged past $120 per barrel, the war is likely to weigh on future sentiment, the investment bank said.

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