EMERGING MARKETS-Markets ease after rally; South African, Israeli assets in focus

In This Article:

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Sri Lanka's dollar bonds, stocks gain on IMF expectations

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Israeli stocks and bonds up after truce deal with Hamas

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South African CPI rises in October

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Stocks shed 0.5%, FX off 0.4%

By Johann M Cherian

Nov 22 (Reuters) - Emerging markets stocks and currencies took a breather on Wednesday after a recent rally, while investors parsed South Africa's inflation report and Israeli stocks and bonds gained on hopes of a temporary lull in the war with Hamas.

MSCI's basket of developing markets currencies weakened 0.4%, while the index tracking equities dipped 0.5% by 0926 GMT.

EM currencies had six straight days of gains and had hit an over one-and-a-half-year high on Tuesday on hopes that U.S. rates had peaked.

Also spurring some caution were minutes from the U.S. Federal Reserve's last policy meet where policymakers said they would proceed "carefully" and only raise interest rates if progress in controlling inflation faltered.

South Africa's rand slipped 0.5% and stocks gained 1.1% after data showed headline consumer inflation, rose to 5.9% on an annual basis in October from September.

But the reading was still marginally below the higher end of the domestic central bank's target range of 3% to 6%, leaving investors jittery ahead of an interest rate decision on Thursday where economists largely expect rates to be on hold.

"Food and transport (fuel) have once again lead local CPI inflation higher... (and) might create some angst for tomorrow's interest rate decision by the SARB (South African Reserve Bank)," Shaun Murison, senior market analyst at IG markets said.

"There is however still a slight chance that the SARB will raise by another 25 basis points although this is not our base case."

Meanwhile, the blue-chip Tel Aviv 35 index rose 0.7% and government bond prices rose as much as 0.4% after Israel's government and Hamas agreed to a four-day pause to over of a month of fighting that had the world on edge.

The local shekel however, dipped 0.4%.

"A ceasefire is a step forward but it is temporary and does not suggest that an end to the conflict is imminent," said Hasnain Malik, head of equity research at Tellimer.

India's rupee strengthened nearly 0.1% and was last trading at 83.32 as the currency got a boost by IPO-related inflows.

Sri Lanka's benchmark index edged up 0.4% and the country's dollar bonds gained after the country's treasury secretary said it expects the International Monetary Fund's executive board to approve the first review of its $2.9 billion bailout by Dec. 6.