S.Africa's rand on backfoot as Greece woes hit EM

South African bank notes featuring images of former South African President Nelson Mandela (R) are displayed next to the American dollar notes in this photo illustration in Johannesburg August 13 2014. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa's rand slipped to near a one-week low early on Tuesday as the U.S. dollar recovered recent losses, boosted by market fears that Greece may default on its debt. At 0617 GMT the rand had weakened 0.25 percent to 12.1750 per dollar, compared to an overnight close of 12.1450 in New York. Against the euro the local unit inched 0.06 percent weaker to 13.0329. Worries over Greece's ability and will to pay back multi-million euro loans stemming from a 2008 bailout have spooked investor sentiment toward emerging market assets, keeping the rand and its peers under pressure despite China announcing further monetary easing moves on Sunday. "The latest negative news from Greece is that the administration is forcing government entities to transfer cash to the central bank — a clear sign of a cash crunch," said currency trader John Cairns of Rand Merchant Bank. Local government bonds were also weaker, with the benchmark instrument due in 2026 adding 2.5 basis points to 7.99 percent.