By Patturaja Murugaboopathy
(Reuters) - Asian currencies rose against the dollar on Thursday, as a guarded outlook from the U.S. Federal Reserve on the economy weighed on the greenback following its widely anticipated interest rate rise.
On Wednesday, the Fed raised key short-term rates by a quarter of a percentage point, as expected, and projected three more hikes in both 2018 and 2019, unchanged from the last round of forecasts in September.
That disappointed some investors, who had expected the Fed to raise its interest rate outlook next year, given robust economic growth and lower unemployment levels in the United States.
The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major currencies, was down 0.06 percent at 93.370, after dipping 0.7 percent on Wednesday.
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"Asian currencies strengthened this morning, largely on the back of what the market perceived as dovish Fed hike," said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at ANZ.
"Also with U.S. 10-year Treasury yields falling after the Fed's announcement, that is seen as positive for portfolio flows into emerging markets including Asia as well."
The South Korean won and the Thai baht led regional gainers, followed by the Indian rupee and the Malaysian ringgit.
South Korea's vice finance minister said on Thursday the government will prepare for the possible effects of the Fed's interest rate increases on markets, although there was little impact on Korean markets.
In the wake of move, China's central bank nudged its money market interest rates upward, while the Hong Kong Money Authority (HKMA) also raised the base rate through its overnight discount window by 25 basis points.
Hong Kong tracks Fed rate moves because its currency is pegged to the U.S. dollar.
ANZ's Goh said he doesn't expect any other central banks to respond directly to the Fed rate hikes to defend their currencies because Asian currencies are actually strengthening and not weakening.
"For next year, we are looking at Malaysia, Korea, the Philippines and Singapore starting to tighten their policy," said Goh.
"But that is largely in response to better growth rather than responding to the Fed."
The central banks of Indonesia and Philippines will meet to review rates later in the day and most analysts expect both to stand pat.
Some analysts expect investors will start to book profits at the end of the year following strong gains in emerging Asian currencies.
The South Korean won, Thai baht and the Malaysian ringgit have surged more than 10 percent this year, while Singapore dollar and Taiwan dollar rose more than 7 percent.
Investors cut their long positions on most emerging Asian currencies in the last two weeks, a Reuters poll showed, with bullish bets on the Indian rupee hitting the lowest since January.
The following table shows rates for Asian currencies against the dollar at 0444 GMT.
CURRENCIES VS U.S. DOLLAR
Change on the day
at 0444 GMT
Currency Latest Previous Pct
bid day Move
Japan yen 112.62 112.53 -0.08
Sing dlr 1.3465 1.3462 -0.02
Taiwan dlr 29.983 30.026 +0.14
Korean won 1087 1090.7 +0.37
Baht 32.450 32.57 +0.37
Peso 50.410 50.48 +0.14
Rupiah 13565 13580 +0.11
Rupee 64.32 64.43 +0.18
Ringgit 4.076 4.085 +0.22
Yuan 6.609 6.6195 +0.16
Change so far in
2017
Currency Latest End 2016 Pct
bid Move
Japan yen 112.62 117.07 +3.95
Sing dlr 1.3465 1.4490 +7.61
Taiwan dlr 29.983 32.279 +7.66
Korean won 1087 1207.70 +11.13
Baht 32.450 35.80 +10.32
Peso 50.410 49.72 -1.37
Rupiah 13565 13470 -0.70
Rupee 64.315 67.92 +5.61
Ringgit 4.076 4.4845 +10.02
Yuan 6.609 6.9467 +5.11
(Reporting By Patturaja Murugaboopathy; Editing by Sam Holmes)
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content