The Philippine Star

Peso vaults back to 53:$1 territory

- – Lawrence Agcaoili

The peso continued to strengthen yesterday, returning to the 53 to $1 level on the back of the aggressive action of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to check rising inflation as well as the progress of the trade talks between the US and China.

The local currency gained 10 centavos to close at 53.97 to $1 from Thursday’s close of 54.07 to $1. It opened stronger at 54.02 and weakened to hit an intraday low of 54.06 before recovering in afternoon trade and hitting an intraday high of 53.965.

Volume reached $660.15 million yesterday, slightly higher than the $658.3 million recorded last Thursday.

Prakash Sakpal, economist in Asia for ING Bank NV, said the strong peso

could be attributed to the recovery of the country’s gross internatio­nal reserves (GIR) last month.

“A bounce in foreign exchange reserves in August also heralded some improvemen­t in the overall balance of payments in the last month,” Sakpal said.

The country’s GIR climbed by $1.1 billion to $77.83 billion in August from $76.72 billion after the national government raised $1.4 billion from the sale of the multitranc­he samurai bonds.

Sakpal said the peso would also continue to stabilize with the expected recovery of remittance­s from overseas Filipino workers, translatin­g to an improved balance of payments (BOP) position.

“Philippine­s’s July overseas workers remittance­s and the August balance of payments position are expected to be positive for the local currency. Remittance­s were unusually weak in June this year despite seasonal inflows for school fee payments but we expect some improvemen­t in July helped by the stabilizat­ion of the peso,” Sakpal said.

Another trader traced the temporary recovery of the peso to the positive trade negotiatio­ns between the US and China.

Likewise, the market is anticipati­ng another aggressive action from the BSP during its rate-setting meeting on Sept. 27.

The BSP has so far jacked up interest rates by 100 basis points to curb rising inflationa­ry ex- pectations as inflation jumped to a fresh nine-year high of 6.4 percent in August from 5.7 percent in July.

It lifted rates by 25 basis points for the first time in more than three years last May 10 followed by another 25 basis points last June 20 and 50 basis points- the biggest in 10 years – last Aug. 9.

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