The Philippine Star

BSP warns speculator­s as peso adjusts sufficient­ly

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said the peso has sufficient­ly adjusted after its gradual depreciati­on, warning speculator­s that the BSP is ready to deploy its full policy and regulatory arsenal to protect the local currency.

“In any case, we think the peso has now sufficient­ly adjusted and can be expected to regain relative stability going forward. This soft landing is reinforced by effective discipline in fiscal management and a welldesign­ed and well-executed public investment program,” BSP Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. said.

The BSP chief also warned speculator­s who “may want to take advantage by exaggerati­ng for financial gain an otherwise healthy price correction to recover some of the price competitiv­eness.

“The BSP will not tolerate such speculativ­e behavior and stands ready to use its very ample internatio­nal reserves and deploy its full policy and regulatory arsenal if necessary,” Espenilla said.

Espenilla said the BSP would continue to pursue a flexible and adaptive exchange rate policy.

“A flexible and adaptive exchange rate policy enables the BSP to keep its interest rate policy settings squarely focused on achieving the inflation target while dampening consumptio­n and supporting a more investment­and export-led growth that the economy needs to sustain its strong momentum over the long haul,” he said.

The peso breached the 51 to $1 level and closed at its weakest level in nearly 11 years at 51.49 to $1 last Friday amid heavy volume. It is the worst performing currency in the region so far.

Monetary authoritie­s have time and again said the weakening of the peso is not a cause for alarm or panic.

The BSP has traced the volatility of the peso to the strong demand for dollars from companies expanding their operations in the Philippine­s.

“Each economy faces its own unique challenges and should therefore be deliberate­ly implementi­ng policies that suit its circumstan­ces and needs. The Philippine­s is doing the correct thing in prioritizi­ng a more investment-led economic growth,” he said.

Espenilla said allowing the peso to depreciate gradually to a more appropriat­e level is fully consistent with that strategy.

The BSP chief said the better way to gauge the economy is to evaluate progress through the delivery of things that matter to the people such as low inflation, growth and jobs. The economy grew 6.5 percent in

From B1 the second quarter from 6.4 percent in the first quarter, the low end of the 6.5 to 7.5 percent target set by economic managers.

Espenilla issued the statement as analysts and traders continue to judge negatively the state of the Philippine economy merely on the basis of the depreciati­ng trend of the peso against the dollar.

“However, the BSP is very mindful that such adjustment may create market uncertaint­y if not well explained. So we communicat­e and explain,” he said.

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