South Africa plans exchange control revamp to attract billions in investment

A general view of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) in Sandton, South Africa, March 30, 2020. REUTERS
JOHANNESBURG, April 27 (Reuters) – South Africa has proposed a sweeping overhaul of its decades-old ​rules governing money flows, aiming to bolster its position as a financial hub for Africa and attract more ‌investor capital.
The finance ministry’s proposals include raising discretionary offshore allowances for individuals, regulating crypto assets and easing capital-flow restrictions.
The Johannesburg Stock Exchange estimates the changes could attract at least 10 trillion rand ($608 billion) in investment over time.
Much of the legislation being overhauled dates back to 1961, with ​some provisions originating as early as 1933, Vukile Davidson, deputy director-general of financial policy at National Treasury, told ​Reuters in an interview.
“At the time, exchange control was principally used to deal with a wide ⁠range of issues beyond just capital flows management,” said Davidson. “It was used to manage the domestic revenue base, to manage ​illicit flows, to ensure the stability of the financial sector.”
That blunt instrument is now being replaced with more targeted reforms, he ​said, signalling South Africa’s readiness to modernise and adopt a “positive bias” approach to managing cross-border capital flows.
National Treasury published the draft circular for public comment on April 17.

DOMICILE FOR NON-RAND FUNDS

A key aim of the overhaul is to address long-standing structural problems that have seen South Africa lose ​financial capital to rival hubs.
Under the proposals, asset managers would for the first time be allowed to run non-rand funds – ​which raise, deploy and report in foreign currencies such as U.S. dollars – from a South African base. Current rules require such funds to ‌be ⁠legally domiciled offshore, even when they are managed locally.
“Places like Mauritius, increasingly Kenya and Kigali, and Dubai … have been much more successful in attracting South African financial firms,” Davidson said.
Samuel Mokorosi, head of deals and origination at the JSE, said rules requiring non-rand funds to be domiciled offshore were costing South Africa jobs and expertise.
The bourse, which leads Operation Phumelela – a private-sector reform ​initiative pushing for capital markets ​reform – welcomed the proposed change.

BRINGING ⁠CRYPTO INTO THE FOLD

The overhaul would also bring crypto assets formally into the exchange control framework, treating them for the first time as a distinct but regulated form of capital.
Crypto trading ​above a set threshold would be permitted only through a new class of regulated intermediaries, ​with mandatory declaration ⁠of holdings and significant transactions to National Treasury.
Crypto plays a growing but contested role in South Africa, where high adoption has made it a tool for trading, remittances and, increasingly, cross-border value transfer outside the traditional banking system.
The exchange control revamp forms part ⁠of a ​broader reform agenda pursued by the government in recent years, spanning energy, ​logistics, infrastructure, fiscal policy and financial regulation.
Davidson said the timing and pace of the changes were also influenced by geopolitical shifts that are creating opportunities for ​South Africa to attract capital flows.
($1 = 16.4660 rand)

Reporting by Kopano Gumbi and Colleen Goko. Editing by Karin Strohecker and Mark Potter

 

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