BusinessMirror

Fed hike will intensify market risks for Asian central banks

- By Marcus Wong

THE expected 75 basis points interest rate increase from the Federal Reserve this week will heap pressure on its Asian counterpar­ts to speed up monetary tightening—or risk further fund outflows and weaker currencies.

An analysis of policy rates in Asia Pacific versus their five-year averages shows a high degree of vulnerabil­ity across the region, as does an examinatio­n of interest rates adjusted for inflation, and yield spreads versus US Treasuries.

The level of threat varies considerab­ly, with the most danger for markets like Thailand, where the central bank has kept rates at a record low. South Korea and New Zealand, which moved early to front load hikes, are better placed but not immune to trouble.

Recent tightening announceme­nts from unschedule­d meetings of the Monetary Authority of Singapore and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas indicate that Asia’s central banks are susceptibl­e to making rapid readjustme­nts as inflation bites harder than expected.

How the pressure is building on the region’s policy makers to normalize their benchmark rates:

Smaller cushion

A 75 BASIS points hike by the Fed would narrow Indonesia’s policyrate buffer versus the US to just one percentage point, which is more than five standard deviations below the five-year average gap of 3.3 percentage points. The same gauge for Thailand stands at 4 standard deviations. Narrowing rate differenti­als with the US have fueled net bond outflows from Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia since early June.

Central banks such as in Australia and South Korea, which have been quicker to increase rates, have buffers that are closer to their five-year averages. New Zealand is the only country in the region where the buffer will still be bigger than the five-year average after a 75 basis points Fed move.

Inflation impact

WHILE some Asian central banks have been aggressive in trying to head off price gains, policy rates adjusted for most recent monthly inflation figures are still below the five-year averages and in negative territory for many markets in the region.

Inflation has risen to the highest in 23 years in South Korea, 21 years in Australia and 14 years in Thailand. And the worst may not be over as elevated commodity prices and supply-chain disruption­s continue to drive up import costs.

On the flip side, inflation in India may begin to moderate due to monsoon rains progressin­g well for agricultur­e, which may ease pressure on rate hikes, according to Credit Suisse Wealth Management.

Bond blues

THE allure of Southeast Asian bonds is at a low ebb as measured in the spread their yields offer over Treasuries. Malaysia’s 10-year government bonds are more than one standard deviation below the five-year average gap.

The spread is also tighter in Thai, Indian and Indonesian bonds. As such, central banks in these countries may need to accelerate the pace of policy tightening to push up yields to curb outflows and headwinds for their currencies.

More rapid rate hikes from South Korea, New Zealand and Australia have supported yields, resulting in a more attractive spread to the US.

The analysis excludes the central banks of Japan and China. The Bank of Japan is committed to its negative rate and yieldcurve control policy, while the People’s Bank of China is providing ample liquidity as the economy struggles with a Covid-zero policy.

 ?? BLOOMBERG PHOTO ?? THE Federal Reserve building. A Fed hike this week will heap pressure on its Asian counterpar­ts to speed up monetary tightening or risk further fund outflows and weaker currencies.
BLOOMBERG PHOTO THE Federal Reserve building. A Fed hike this week will heap pressure on its Asian counterpar­ts to speed up monetary tightening or risk further fund outflows and weaker currencies.

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