"The German Ifo data that came out
this morning was better than expected and the euro then firmed and so did the
rand," a local currency trader said.
He put dollar rand in a range of
7.64 to 7.72 for the remainder of the session.
The trader said the rand
had shown little reaction to local producer price index (PPI) data that was
released earlier.
At 12:05 local time, the rand was bid at R7.6756 to
the dollar from its previous close of R7.7226. It was bid at R10.2260 to the
euro from R10.2318 before, and at R12.0540 against sterling from R12.0926
previously.
The euro was bid at US$1.3322 from its previous close of
US$1.3255.
Statistics SA said SA's PPI registered growth of 8.9% year on
year (y/y) in January from 9.8% y/y in December and 10.1% y/y in November.
The average annual change for 2011 was 8.4% compared with 6.0% in 2010.
The PPI, on a monthly basis, was 0.3% after decreasing slightly between November
and December 2011.
The PPI was expected to clock in at 9.5% y/y in
January, a survey by I-Net Bridge found. Forecasts among five leading economists
surveyed ranged from 8.8% y/y to 9.6% y/y.
Meanwhile Dow Jones Newswires
reported that the euro was up versus the dollar, with investors focusing on a
better-than-expected German Ifo survey, while concerns about Greece's latest
bailout programme were put aside.
Investors had been concerned about
economic data after Wednesday's eurozone's composite purchasing managers' index
data for February contracted and was below consensus.
In February, the
Ifo index increased to 109.6 from 108.3 in January.
"Today's Ifo index
provides further evidence that the economic contraction at the end of last year
was only a brief stopover," said Carsten Brzeski, economist at ING Bank.
"It looks as though almost nothing can shatter German business
optimism," he said.