BusinessMirror

Peso faces new threat as PHL gears up for midterm elections

- By Ditas Lopez |

AS if falling for six straight years wasn’t enough, the Philippine peso is now facing an additional threat: a midterm election that may compound concerns about its economy. As the nation gears up for polls due in May, political uncertaint­ies may pose an added source of pressure to those stemming from its long-running deficits. With risk appetite likely to remain fragile due to fears of a global slowdown, traders may drive the peso back below the 13-year low set in October.

“The overarchin­g downside risks will probably emanate from risk-off sentiment refocusing worries on high inflation and twin-deficit risks,” said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank Ltd. in Singapore. “Political risks could also creep back in, and those will add to the headwinds for the peso.”

The peso will drop about 2.5 percent to 54 per dollar by yearend, making it the third-worst currency in the region after the Indonesian rupiah and Thai baht, according to Bloomberg surveys of analysts. It closed at 52.51 on Friday.

The overarchin­g downside risks will probably emanate from risk-off sentiment refocusing worries on high inflation and twindefici­t risks. Political risks could also creep back in, and those will add to the headwinds for the peso.”—Varathan

The peso has been undermined by local politics more than once in the past. The currency sank almost 4 percent in 2003 as an attempted coup and corruption scandals hurt then-President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. Current President Rodrigo Duterte’s approval rating is far higher but given the unfavorabl­e external backdrop, investors may choose to avoid Philippine assets for now.

As the Federal Reserve weighs further interest-rate hikes and US-China frictions spur concern over the outlook for global trade, money managers are likely to remain wary of investing in nations that depend on capital inflows to finance fiscal and current-account deficits.

The Central Bank predicts the current-account deficit will widen to 2.3 percent of gross domestic product in 2019, the most in 18 years. The budget balance was negative P39.1 billion, $745 million, in November, having been in deficit for seven straight months.

Traders will be watching November trade figures due January 10 to get a better picture of the outlook. The nation will report a deficit of $1.99 billion, versus the record shortfall of $4.21 billion in October, according to a Bloomberg survey.

Waning popularity

THIS year’s election will be a referendum on Duterte, after his popularity has been sapped by quickening inflation that eroded consumers’ purchasing power. About 18,000 national and local posts, including half the 24 Senate seats and about 300 House of Representa­tives slots will be contested.

Most lawmakers identify themselves as allies of Duterte’s party but the President needs the approval of both chambers to pass legislatio­n if he wants to enact changes such as the tax reform he pushed through earlier to help fund an infrastruc­ture plan of at least P8 trillion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines