Currencies across the region jumped Thursday, following their developing-nation peers in the Americas and Europe, after the US data published Wednesday led to a slump in the dollar. The Thai baht led gains, rising 0.9 per cent, while the Indonesian rupiah strengthened 0.7 per cent.
“The US inflation data affirmed our assumption for the dollar to return gains against Asian currencies starting this quarter into the rest of the year,” said Philip Wee, a senior foreign-exchange strategist at DBS in Singapore. “The worst is likely over for Asian currencies, though volatility will persist.”
Optimism toward emerging Asian assets has already been building in recent months as shown by fund inflows. This month alone, global investors have bought a net $2.06 billion of Indian stocks and $1.25 billion of Korean equities, along with $1.71 billion of Korean bonds and $721 million of Indonesian debt.
JPMorgan Asset Management shifted to an overweight position on Indonesian bonds this month, saying any selloff would be a good opportunity to buy duration.
‘Grind Lower’
Annual US consumer-price gains slowed to 8.5 per cent in July from a 9.1 per cent June advance that was the largest in four decades, the Labor Department said Wednesday.
“Our baseline has always been for US inflation to grind lower over time, and for growth jitters to become more apparent into year-end,” said Yanxi Tan, a currency strategist at Maybank in Singapore. “That would support some retracement of the dollar’s strength against Asian FX in the second half of the year.”
Swaps referencing the Fed’s September meeting swung back toward a half-point rate increase after earlier pricing in a larger move.
“Bets on a 75 basis-point hike may be unwound, and the euro, the won and commodity currencies will get a boost as risk sentiment improves,” Kim Seunghyuk, a foreign-exchange analyst at NH Futures in Seoul, wrote in a research note.
Still Bearish
Still, there are those who remain bearish on Asian currencies, saying last week’s better-than-forecast payroll figures are a reason for the Fed to keep raising interest rates.
“We are not chasing this USD/Asia lower move,” said Trang Thuy Le, an Asia foreign-exchange strategist at Macquarie Capital Ltd. in Hong Kong. “We don’t think one CPI report is enough to change the Fed rhetoric. Between payrolls and CPI, we throw our weight behind the strong payroll numbers.”
Emerging Asia currencies are still nursing heavy losses this year. The Korean won has dropped 8.7 per cent, the Philippine peso has fallen 8.1 per cent and the Taiwan dollar has lost 7.6 per cent.
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