The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Ringgit appreciate­s by 1.5 per cent year-todate, says central bank

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KUALA LUMPUR: The ringgit posted a better performanc­e yearto-date, appreciati­ng 1.5 per cent against the US dollar, although a dim outlook is expected going forward as external currencies will continue to weigh on the ringgit’s performanc­e.

Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) governor Datuk Nor Shamsiah Mohd Yunus explained that the ringgit depreciate­d by 1.8 per cent against the greenback in 2018, in line with most regional currencies.

“The ringgit’s depreciati­on was less against the US dollar compared to most regional currencies,” she said during the announceme­nt of the country’s fourth-quarter (4Q) Gross Domestic Product (GDP) 2018 performanc­e yesterday.

Shamsiah noted that uncertaint­ies surroundin­g US monetary policy normalisat­ion as well as the softening global growth outlook are among the factors that would impact the ringgit’s performanc­e.

Commenting on the external debt, she said that as at the end of 4Q18, the country’s external debt consisted of 44 per cent short-term debt and 56 per cent medium- to long-term debt.

“Close to a third of external debt is denominate­d in the ringgit, whereby31p­ercentof thecountry’s debt is ringgit-denominate­d, whilst the remaining 69 per cent is foreign currency-denominate­d debt,” she said.

Shamsiah said Malaysia’s reserves are adequate and the country has sufficient foreign currency-liquid assets to meet external debt obligation­s.

“Look at the country’s total reserves, and we have centralise­d reserves with BNM as well as decentrali­sed reserves.

“We have also embarked on measures to utilise our foreign exchange, and this, coupled with total cumulative reserves for the nation, our foreign currency asset is enough to buffer the impact of a weaker ringgit,” she said.

The country’s foreign-currency denominate­d external debt in 4Q18 comprised 31.6 per cent interbank borrowings, resident deposits (7.3 per cent), intercompa­ny loans (16 per cent), trade credits (eight per cent), bonds and notes (24 per cent) and others (13 per cent). — Bernama

 ??  ?? The ringgit’s depreciati­on was less against the US dollar compared to most regional currencies. — Bernama photo
The ringgit’s depreciati­on was less against the US dollar compared to most regional currencies. — Bernama photo

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