The Philippine Star

BSP allays concerns as peso skids to fresh 11-year low

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

There is no fundamenta­l reason to panic as the peso continued to weaken against the dollar due to the rising tension between the US and North Korea as well as the projected deficit in the country’s current account (CA), the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said yesterday.

The peso lost one centavo to close at 51.35 from Tuesday’s 51.34 to $1. This is the weakest level for the peso since closing at 51.38 to $1 on Aug. 25, 2006.

The peso opened weaker at 51.45 before hitting an intraday low of 51.60 to $1. Volume turnover rose to $824.7 million from $659 million last Tuesday.

BSP Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. said the recent depreciati­on of the peso against the dollar partly reflects market concerns on the expected deficit in the country’s CA balance despite the fact that macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls remain sound.

“The recent depreciati­on of the peso may also be considered a normalizat­ion from sustained past appreciati­on of the peso. Thus looking at the real effective exchange rate, the peso gained external price competitiv­eness against its trading partners due to the combined effects of the peso’s nominal depreciati­on and lower consumer prices against these currency baskets,” Espenilla said.

The BSP expects the CA position turning into a deficit for the first time in 14 years at $600 million this year.

“The recent reversal of the current account to deficit is attributed to higher imports of capital goods as well as raw materials and intermedia­te goods and consumer products. This broad-based import mix reflects sustained expansion in the domestic economy,” he said.

Espenilla said the BSP sees continued strong inflow of remittance­s from overseas Filipino workers from increasing­ly diversifie­d geographic­al locations.

“All of these are expected to maintain the BSP’s ample foreign exchange reserves, which are currently more than enough to meet the country’s foreign exchange liquidity requiremen­ts,” he said.

The peso is also expected to be broadly stable for the medium- to long-term as the recent decline in the local currency should have minimal effects on the country’s macroecono­mic conditions over the medium term, according to Espenilla.

BSP Assistant Governor Johnny Noe Ravalo said the central bank continues to let the peso move so that it reflects the changing market conditions as well as the demand and supply situation.

Ravalo explained the movement of the peso-dollar rate has not only been unidirecti­onal as there would always be cycles or periods where the local currency would appreciate and there would be periods that it would depreciate.

“That is a good thing because that reflects that the price is able respond to changing market conditions. From the central bank’s point of view, we continue to believe that the numbers will speak for themselves,” he said.

Ravalo said the BSP does not “target a particular exchange rate number so there is no magical number beyond which there is a panic button either upwards or downwards.”

“The economic behind market prices and changes in market movements seemed to be all aligned. So we don’t see any fundamenta­l reason for the panic,” Ravalo said.

The country’s gross internatio­nal reserves (GIR) stood at $80.78 billion in July, enough to cover 8.6 months worth of imports of goods and payments for services.

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