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Eskom's outlook for power has lifted the rand to a five-week high.

The South African rand strengthened Monday, reaching its highest level in five weeks. State utility Eskom stated that it was optimistic regarding the power outlook for the winter in the Southern Hemisphere, and aimed to avoid any electricity cuts within the next four month.

Since more than a century, power outages have plagued Africa's industrialised nation. This has hampered economic growth.

Investor confidence is still shaky despite Eskom's attempts to reduce power outages to the levels recorded in 2023. This is due to 14 consecutive days of blackouts in

January-April

Chief Executive Dan Marokane called this year's setback a temporary one. At 1110 GMT the rand was trading at 18,2850 per dollar, which is 0.7% higher than the Friday close.

The dollar last traded slightly lower against a basket currency as investors awaited more details about U.S. China trade relations and the Federal Reserve policy meeting this week.

Citigroup expects South Africa's currency to gain against the U.S. Dollar, as the premium on the real rate in Africa's most developed economy and the firmer commodity exports are expected to outweigh the domestic political uncertainty.

Bhumika Gupta, a strategist from South Africa, and Luis Costa, a foreign exchange specialist from Brazil said that they expected the rand to weaken to less than 18 dollars per rand.

Societe Generale's strategists, on the other hand, said that South Africa is still facing domestic and geopolitical uncertainty, so they predict the rand will reach 20 rand per dollar by the end of June.

The S&P Global Purchasing Managers' Index will be released on Tuesday. Manufacturing and foreign reserve data are due on Thursday.

Early deals showed that the benchmark South African 2030 government bond had a lower yield, which was up by 2 basis points at 8.845%. Reporting by Sfundo parakozov and Colleen GOKO. Mark Potter and Sharon Singleton edited the article.

(source: Reuters)