Most Asian FX weaken, Philippine peso flat on brisk inflation
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Most Asia currencies dipped on Tuesday
against the dollar as the greenback rallied amid concerns over
rapid inflation, which also pushed U.S bond yields higher, while
the Philippine peso was flat after the country’s inflation
scaled a three-year high.
The Philippine peso shed early gains after Bangko
Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Benjamin Diokno said
inflationary pressures are likely to persist beyond 2022, but
pointed out that the pace and timing of any further policy
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actions will be data-driven.
“We expect price pressures to persist in the near term,
given the supply chain disruptions coupled with surprisingly
resilient domestic demand,” Nicholas Mapa, senior economist for
the Philippines at ING, said.
BSP can retain its hawkish bias for the rest of the year. A
25 basis points (bps) hike is expected in the next meeting with
a punchy 50 bps also in play, he added.
With inflation accelerating beyond the BSP’s target range of
2% to 4%, the Philippines said it would cut tariffs for rice,
corn and pork imported from suppliers outside Southeast Asia
until the end of 2022.
Mapa, however, warned that incoming BSP governor Felipe
Medalla maintained a rather dovish stand and it would be
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difficult to gauge how aggressive BSP would be when he took over
on July 1.
The South Korean won led losses among other Asian
currencies to weaken 1.4% against the dollar, its biggest drop
in nearly two weeks. The Singapore dollar lost 0.2% while
the baht and Taiwan dollar eased 0.4% each.
The U.S. 10-year treasury yields climbed to
3.05% for the first time in nearly four weeks ahead of consumer
price data on Friday.
“Ahead of the upcoming data and the Federal Reserve
meetings, U.S. treasury yields are likely to remain heavy, so a
push up to the old highs of 3.2% cannot be ruled out in coming
days,” Westpac analysts wrote in a note.
“We see the multi-week price action as a broad range trade
as the market awaits the impact of upcoming 50 basis points rate
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hikes from the Fed,” they added.
Stocks were mixed in Asia as overnight jitters on Wall
Street offset confidence from the improving COVID-19 situation
in China and the potential easing of regulatory constraints on
Chinese tech companies.
South Korean stocks fell 1.5% to their worst day
since May 24, followed by equities in India, which lost
as much as 1.2% to their biggest drop since May 19. Malaysian
equities skid as much as 0.6% to hit their lowest since
Feb. 7.
Meanwhile, elevated prices of oil are also putting pressure
on Asian markets, many of which are net importers of the
commodity. An anticipated recovery in Chinese demand and doubts
over OPEC+ producers’ decision to increase output have continued
to push oil prices higher.
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HIGHLIGHTS:
** Indonesian 10-year benchmark yields rise marginally to
7.023%
** Singapore 10-year benchmark yields rise 47 basis points
to 2.887%
** Thailand’s exports are expected to rise by 5% to 8% this
year, supported by a weaker baht
Asia stock indexes and
currencies at 0537 GMT
COUNTRY FX RIC FX FX YTD INDEX STOCKS STOCKS
DAILY % % DAILY YTD %
%
Japan -0.75 -13.39 0.10 -2.94
China
India -0.09 -4.34 -1.00 -5.48
Indonesi -0.08 -1.47 0.47 8.34
a
Malaysia -0.20 -5.28 -0.49 -2.37
Philippi +0.00 -3.67 0.47 -5.26
nes
S.Korea
Singapor -0.19 -2.18 -0.24 3.30
e
Taiwan -0.30 -6.15 -0.45 -9.27
Thailand -0.48 -3.13 -0.62 -1.32
(Reporting by Tejaswi Marthi in Bengaluru; Editing by Sherry
Jacob-Phillips)
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