Khaleej Times

Peso falling? Keep calm (and remit)

- Ditas Lopez and Clarissa Batino

MANILA — Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Nestor Espenilla called for calm on Sunday after the peso fell to an almost 11-year low against the dollar last week, saying the currency isn’t expected to free fall given the nation’s strong economic fundamenta­ls.

“The peso is market-determined. It’s natural for it to show volatility as it adjusts to market conditions and all the short-term uncertaint­ies such as increased tension in North Korea,” Espenilla said in a phone message to reporters. “We don’t expect it to do a free-fall because our economic fundamenta­ls now, unlike before, are solid and very strong.”

The peso has lost 2.5 per cent this year, making it the worst performer among 12 Asian currencies tracked by Bloomberg. It weakened to 50.98 to the greenback on Friday, the lowest since August 29, 2006. The currency has been dropping as the nation heads to its first current account deficit in 15 years. Geopolitic­al concerns have also spurred a flight to assets of advanced economies. Still, the nation enjoys strong domestic demand and is one of the fastestgro­wing economies in the world.

“The peso is capable of correcting itself as the market calms down and digests the relevant informatio­n,” Espenilla said. He added that the central bank can act “strategica­lly” if there’s excess volatility, noting a “huge pile of forex reserves.”

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