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Singapore dollar seen sliding on slowing growth

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SINGAPORE: Singapore’s dollar is set to weaken because the central bank is likely to scrap its appreciati­on bias at a policy meeting next week, according to a growing group of forecaster­s.

Mizuho Bank Ltd and Societe Generale SA are defying consensus by predicting the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) will adjust the slope of its nominal-effective-exchange-rate policy band to zero, from 1%, to counter slowing economic growth.

Although Singapore’s dollar has already fallen 1.4% this year against the US currency, it is almost unchanged on a nominal-effective basis.

The local currency may “scream its way” to weaker than S$1.40 per US dollar if MAS adjusts its bias to zero, said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho in Singapore.

“Us-china tariffs escalation, US-EU tensions, political uncertaint­ies and wobbling asset confidence all bearing down suggest that the MAS has cause to remove the slope.”

Singapore’s heavy reliance on trade makes the nation a bellwether for growth sentiment in Asia, along with nations such as South Korea and Taiwan.

The MAS guides the local currency against an undisclose­d basket and adjusts the pace of appreciati­on or depreciati­on by changing the slope, width and center of a band.

It announces policy twice a year, with the next decision due Monday.

“A large policy easing is most likely,” Societe Generale analysts Jason Daw in Singapore and Kiyong Seong in Hong Kong wrote in a research note last week.

“Our base case is that the MAS lowers the slope of the NEER midpoint to 0%. There is a very low chance that the MAS stays on hold.”

While Mizuho and Societe Generale both predict an end to the MAS’S appreciati­on bias, the majority of other economists anticipate it will just reduce the slope to 0.5%. Those holding this view include DBS Bank Ltd, United Overseas Bank Ltd, Westpac Banking Corp, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group.

There have been growing signs in recent months that the Us-china trade war is having an impact on Singapore’s economy. The government in August slashed this year’s growth forecast to almost zero after gross domestic product shrank an annualised 3.3% in the second quarter.

The MAS has surprised the market before, moving to a neutral policy of zero per cent appreciati­on in the exchange rate in April 2016 when economic growth ground to a halt. The Singapore dollar slid 0.9% that day.

Aviva Investors said it’s betting against the local currency as it joins Mizuho and Societe Generale in predicting the MAS will end its appreciati­on bias.

“We have increased the size of our short Singapore dollar versus the effective exchange rate,” said Stuart Ritson, portfolio manager for emerging-market debt in Singapore at Aviva, which oversees Us$440bil.

“There’s an increasing chance that the MAS may move to a flat slope at the upcoming October meeting.”

 ??  ?? Set to weaken: The currency may ‘scream its way’ to weaker than S$1.40 per US dollar if MAS adjusts its bias to zero, according to an analyst.
Set to weaken: The currency may ‘scream its way’ to weaker than S$1.40 per US dollar if MAS adjusts its bias to zero, according to an analyst.

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