The Sun (Malaysia)

Capital curbs pressure only if reserves slip to US$80b level: AmBank Research

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PETALING JAYA: Currency peg pressure will only kick in if and when the reserves level approaches US$80 billion (RM332.1 billion) or six months of retained imports, AmBank Research opined.

“Our estimation suggests the threshold is around five months retained imports or about US$70 billion (RM290.6 billion) in reserves for the currency to be pegged,” the research house said in a note yesterday, in response to Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) governor Datuk Nor Shamsiah Mohd Yunus’ remarks that capital controls should be an option for Asian markets to pre-empt financial crises.

As at Sept 28, BNM’s internatio­nal reserves amounted to US$103 billion (RM427.5 billion), which is sufficient to finance 7.4 months of retained imports and is 0.9 times the short-term external debt.

Some RM17.7 billion was used for liquidity management via short position for forward and futures as at end-August.

While the option to use capital controls at the moment could be fairly premature, AmBank Research said the market should be mindful of it, especially if global volatility remains strong or becomes stronger, resulting in a huge capital outflow.

“Added pressure on Malaysia will be the risk of rising fiscal deficit/GDP and the challenge to lower the public debt/ GDP. Should the depreciati­on of the currencies turn out to be drastic, it will exert a strong pressure on countries exposed to high USD-denominate­d debt, including Malaysia. Such pressure may potentiall­y provide justificat­ion for capital controls.”

AmBank Research said the reserves level plays a crucial role in determinin­g the need to peg a currency, which will reduce uncertaint­ies regarding the value of the currency and improve competitiv­eness, thus benefiting the export-oriented sectors more.

However, it noted that the potential setback is that an undervalue­d ringgit makes imports of capital and intermedia­te goods more expensive and this has deleteriou­s effects for the country’s medium- and long-term capacity expansion and growth.

“Besides, it will not augur well for short-term foreign players in the local bourse and global pension funds with restrictio­ns to invest in markets with capital controls.”

Malaysia introduced capital controls on Sept 1, 1998 during the height of the 1997/98 Asian financial crisis, with the ringgit being pegged at 3.80 against the US dollar. The move was widely criticised by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund which advised countries to liberalise their capital accounts and avoid imposing capital controls.

The currency peg was removed on July 21, 2005 after China ended the yuan peg to the greenback.

In 2016, Malaysia introduced some capital flow management measures to clamp down on ringgit trading in the offshore non-deliverabl­e forwards market.

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