The Borneo Post

Ringgit to strengthen to 4.10 against US dollar by year-end

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KUALA LUMPUR: The ringgit is projected to strengthen further to 4.10 against the US dollar by year-end compared with 4.17 last year despite heightened uncertaint­y, Kenanga Research said.

The research house said it is cautiously bullish on the local note on its direction following the country’s strong economic recovery outlook.

Neverthele­ss, it said the local note may continue to trade under pressure in the next few months due to the volatile market environmen­t brought about by the Eastern Europe crisis, China’s stringent pandemicco­ntrol measures, and the Fed increasing hawkishnes­s.

On the overnight policy rate, it expects Bank Negara Malaysia to raise the lending rate probably in the third quarter of 2022 after major economic indicators point to a sustainabl­e recovery.

“The reopening of Malaysia’s internatio­nal borders on April 1, coupled with the central bank’s continued accommodat­ive policy stance, is seen to prop up economic growth in the second half of the year,” it said in a note yesterday.

Kenanga Research said this is despite increased downside risks to both the global and domestic economies due to the RussiaUkra­ine war and China’s zero Covid-19 policy.

BNM yesterday released its internatio­nal reserves as at endMarch, which declined for the third straight month.

It fell by US$0.2 billion or 0.1 per cent month-on-month (February: -0.3 per cent) to US$115.6 billion as at March 31, 2022, partly due to a stronger greenback.

“This is sufficient to finance 6.1 months of imports of goods and services (previously retained imports) and is 1.2 times total short-term external debt,” it said, adding that a sharp decline in other reserve assets masked a rise in gold and foreign currency reserves.

Kenanga Research said in ringgit terms, the value of BNM reserves registered a positive flip, rising by RM3.6 billion or 0.7 per cent month-on-month to RM485.8 billion.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? The local note may continue to trade under pressure in the next few months due to the volatile market environmen­t brought about by the Eastern Europe crisis, China’s stringent pandemic-control measures, and the Fed increasing hawkishnes­s.
— AFP photo The local note may continue to trade under pressure in the next few months due to the volatile market environmen­t brought about by the Eastern Europe crisis, China’s stringent pandemic-control measures, and the Fed increasing hawkishnes­s.

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