South Africa's forex reserves just smashed through record levels, hitting $81.060 billion in February 2026. That's up from $80.193 billion in January, which was already the largest since 1998. December 2025 came in at $75.89 billion. The trend is undeniable—reserves keep climbing.
South Africa's forex reserves shattered records at $81.060 billion in February 2026—an undeniable upward trend that keeps accelerating.
Breaking down the numbers reveals what's driving this surge. Gold reserves jumped to $20.670 billion in January 2026 from $17.493 billion the month before. That's a massive increase, thanks to rising gold prices more than actual purchases. Foreign currency reserves grew to $52.857 billion from $51.795 billion. SDR holdings ticked up to $6.666 billion. Meanwhile, the forward position—basically hedging contracts—dropped to $0.564 billion from $1.161 billion.
Put it all together and official reserve assets totaled $80.193 billion in January. CEIC data shows $52.4 billion, an all-time high by their measure. FRED reports total reserves excluding gold at $59.520 billion. Different methodologies, same story. The reserves are fat.
Context matters here. Back in January 2003, reserves hit a pitiful low of $5.6 billion. The climb since then has been remarkable, especially considering South Africa's challenges. Power shortages, political uncertainty, structural economic problems—yet the reserves keep growing.
Import cover stood at 5.8 months in January 2026, down slightly from 6.1 months in December. Reserves equaled 11.336% of GDP in September 2025. These metrics suggest adequate buffers against external shocks. The trade balance was positive at $572.7 million in January, supporting reserve accumulation.
Globally, South Africa ranks 38th with $65.4 billion in total reserves. That's strongest by African standards, backed by diversified exports and deep financial markets. Mining output helps too, obviously. The South African Rand remains a key emerging market currency in forex trading, with its value heavily influenced by commodity prices and global risk sentiment.
But sustainability remains the question. Money supply M2 increased to 298.6 billion dollars year-over-year in January 2026. Domestic credit reached $383.5 billion, up 9.3% annually. These figures suggest domestic liquidity expansion. The reserve requirement ratio sits at just 2.5%. Low requirements mean banks don't need to hold much in reserves, potentially limiting central bank tools. The South African Reserve Bank manages exchange controls to regulate cross-border capital flows and foreign currency transactions, which directly impacts how these reserves can be deployed.
The South African Reserve Bank's monetary policy decisions and occasional forex interventions play a crucial role in managing these reserves and stabilizing the Rand against external pressures. Record reserves look impressive. Whether South Africa can maintain this trajectory amid structural headwinds? That's the real test.