The rand firmed against the dollar in noon trade as it tracked a euro that recouped its losses following news of Italy's downgrade.
"We've seen the euro - and therefore the rand - strengthen late this morning but there's been no specific news - it's probably just because European bourses are positive," a local rand trader said.
"What happens next all depends on the euro - yes, the German ZEW investment sentiment data was slightly better than expected and therefore positive for the single currency, but remember that the fundamental factors are still in place," he added.
At 11.34am local time, the rand was bid at R7.6371/$ from its previous close of R7.7023/$. It was bid at R10.4596/€ from R10.4712/€ before, and at R11.9778/£ from R12.0489/£ previously. The euro was at $1.3687 from $1.3606 before.
RMB analysts said in a note that the European crisis had taken on dangerous new dimensions.
"First, the stability of the eurozone banking system is being increasingly questioned. This morning there are stories on how large European corporates and Chinese state-owned banks are cutting exposure to banks exposed to the PIIGS's debt.
"Secondly, the big change is that capital has started to flood out of emerging markets (EMs)."
EM equities lost 2.8% yesterday against only 1.8% for developed markets and bond spreads were starting to spike, RMB added.
"We saw local signs of this selling last week when foreigners dumped R10bn local bonds in two days before returning but we are also averaging around R1bn outflows per day from the equity market.
"It seemed in the early part of this crisis that emerging markets had suddenly emerged - i.e. they were being treated on their own merit, not simply lumped as a risky asset - but it seems that the old relationships are staring to reassert and they are back to submerging in time of stress."
Meanwhile Dow Jones Newswires reported that in currency markets that the euro had recovered losses it made on the S&P downgrade of Italy, supported by the positive tone in equity markets.
European stock markets edged higher on Tuesday, shrugging off the Italian downgrade. Instead, investors picked up recently battered stocks ahead of the second leg of Greek aid talks with international lenders later in the global day.