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War on washing machines may have an early casualty in Singapore

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SINGAPORE: US President Donald Trump’s attack on washing machine imports may end up putting the Singapore dollar through the spin-cycle.

Economic growth in the Asian city state has closely followed year-on-year changes in global trade volumes for almost twenty years, as the nation handles the second highest amount of containers in the world.

Any escalation of US protection­ism, with Trump seen advocating his “America First” policies at Davos, could have an adverse reaction on investor expectatio­ns for Singapore’s growth, monetary policy and the local dollar.

“Singapore would be more adversely affected than other economies should the US step up protection­ist policies,” said Hirofumi Suzuki, an economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. “A drop in world trade volumes could damp speculatio­n of monetary policy tightening and weigh on the Singapore dollar.”

Trump comes to the World Economic Forum with a rap sheet in the eyes of proponents of global trade. In his first year in office, he’s withdrawn the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p free trade deal and the Paris Agreement on climate change. He’s threatened to renege on the Iran nuclear deal, a free-trade agreement with South Korea, and the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta).

The Singapore dollar is particular­ly exposed to investor expectatio­ns of future growth trends as the country’s central bank uses the currency as a monetary policy tool instead of interest rates. The local currency has risen about 1.6% against the US dollar so far this year.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore is expected to shift to a 0.5% appreciati­on in the nominal effective exchange rate in April from the current zero appreciati­on, according to a research note from United Overseas Bank Ltd on Tuesday. — Bloomberg

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