The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

M’sia bonds back in favour

Foreign reserves under scrutiny as investors brace for outflows

-

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s bonds are coming back in favour but the respite may be brief.

The level of the nation’s foreign reserves is coming under scrutiny as investors brace for outflows from emerging markets.

The lowest reserve adequacy in Asia is sapping demand for securities just as they are recovering from the longest selloff by foreign investors in eight years. Relatively high foreign ownership and an accelerati­on in inflation from last year are adding to risks as major central banks sound increasing­ly hawkish on interest rates.

“There has been a rebound of flows into Malaysia bonds after huge redemption­s late last year,” said Desmond Soon, head of investment management for Asia ex-Japan at Western Asset Management Co in Singapore, which oversees US$433bil (RM1.85 trillion). “But considerin­g Malaysia’s FX reserve coverage, the number remains vulnerable to a significan­t change in global risk appetite.”

Malaysia’s reserves are sufficient to finance 6.5 months of imports, according to data compiled by Commerzban­k AG using a 12-month moving average. That compares with 9.9 months for Indonesia, 10.8 for Thailand, 11.2 months for the Philippine­s, and 21.6 for China.

Bank Negara’s reserves amount to just 1.1 times the amount of shortterm debt on issue, Commerzban­k estimates. The correspond­ing ratio is 2.8 for Indonesia, 3.7 for Philippine­s and 4.3 for India.

While a concern to investors, the ratios don’t faze Malaysian policy makers.

“Malaysia’s level of foreign-exchange reserves is adequate for our stage of economic developmen­t, domestic market structure and external position,” Bank Negara governor Datuk Seri Muhammad Ibrahim said in a speech last week in Kuala Lumpur. “Malaysia’s reserves are well within the adequacy range, placing us in a comfortabl­e position relative to regional peers and fulfilling recognised global standards.”

Bank Negara’s internatio­nal reserves are sufficient to finance 7.9 months of retained imports, according to the central bank’s calculatio­ns, higher than Commerzban­k’s estimate.

Malaysia’s reserves have dropped for four straight years, declining to US$93.3bil in September 2015, from as high as US$141.4bil in May 2013. They climbed back to US$99.1bil as of July 14 as the ringgit strengthen­ed, according to central bank data.

“Foreign-exchange reserves are still low relative to the near term risk of outflows,” said Julian Wee, a senior market strategist at National Australia Bank Ltd in Singapore. “This weak foreign-exchange reserves position will play a greater role during strong dollar periods, wherein Bank Negara has to be far the more cautious about intervenin­g to slow a fall in the ringgit, thereby leading to underperfo­rmance.”

Global funds have started to return to Malaysian bonds after cutting holdings for five straight months through March, the longest streak since December 2008. They bought RM15bil during April and May, after selling RM59bil in the five months through March.

Malaysia’s 10-year bond yields have dropped almost half a percentage point to 3.99% since reaching an eight-year high of 4.46% in November. The ringgit has strengthen­ed to 4.2873 per dollar from as weak as 4.5002 in January and the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of analysts is for it to end the year at 4.27.

Pioneer Investment Management Ltd said in June it’s cautiously positive on ringgit bonds, while Schroder Investment Management Ltd likes the ringgit due to Malaysia’s positive macroecono­mic conditions.

While Commerzban­k points out the weakness in Malaysia’s reserves, it sees positives in the nation’s economic fundamenta­ls.

“A stabilisat­ion in FX reserves, the currency, and volatility should all bode well for sentiment toward Malaysian government bonds,” said Charlie Lay, an analyst at Commerzban­k in Singapore. “Healthy domestic demand and firm exports should also reinforce the positive macro picture.”

Sentiment toward Malaysian bonds may also be affected by the ongoing scandal over state investment company 1Malaysia Developmen­t Bhd and the central bank’s forecast for inflation to accelerate this year.

1MDB failed to make payments totalling more than US$628mil to Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund as part of a settlement over a debt dispute, according to a filing to the London Stock Exchange on Tuesday.

Inflation surged to an eight-year high in March amid a recovery in energy prices. The central bank said that month it expected consumer-price gains to average 3% to 4% this year, up from 2.1% in 2016.

Accelerati­ng inflation, coupled with strengthen­ing domestic demand, has prompted Natixis SA and United Overseas Bank Ltd to flag that an interest-rate increase may be on the way. Bank Negara has kept its benchmark at 3 percent since July 2016 and said last month headline inflation is expected to moderate in the second half of the year.

“Reserve adequacy is toward the low end, which is one factor the market latches onto in periods of broader weakness,” said Wilfred Wee, a fund manager at Investec Asset Management Ltd in Singapore, which oversaw US$124bil as at endJune. “If Bank Negara can stabilise the ringgit and inflation, and inflation expectatio­ns moderate further, the appeal of Malaysia government bonds can improve.” — Bloomberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia