Manila Bulletin

In a good year for Asian currencies, peso is shunned

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Asian emerging market currencies have been having their best year since before the 2013 taper tantrum, bolstered by pace-setting growth rates and attractive yields.

But the Philippine peso has been left out of the party – ironically after it held up better than peers including Indonesia’s rupiah back in 2013. Unless things change, it’ll be a fifth straight year of declines for the peso, which is down 3.2 percent so far in 2017 versus a 7.4 percent rise for Thailand’s baht.

For now, that slide may be set to deepen as traders test the tolerance levels of Philippine policy makers, who have so far refrained from actions to prop up the exchange rate.

“The market appears to have turned to the view the Philippine authoritie­s do not care about the PHP,” said Callum Henderson, managing director of global markets-APAC at Eurasia Group UL Limited in Singapore. “In my view that is wrong, but recent statements may not be enough and the central bank may have to match words with deeds.”

It’s hard to make a concise case for why the peso is so forlorn, given the country’s growth trending above 6 percent the past half decade. Currency analysts list a series of reasons:

The current-account deficit is set to widen because of ambitious infrastruc­ture plans. Uncertaint­y over the passage of tax reforms that are winding their way through the legislatur­e. Political upheavals such as President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs are harming sentiment. Battles between government troops and Islamic State-linked militants in the southern city of Marawi have prompted additional caution among investors, and the cost of the military activity is putting pressure on the budget deficit.

“When you’re looking at other currencies in the region, it’s less appealing from that perspectiv­e,” said Stephen Innes, head of trading for Asia Pacific with Oanda, in an interview in Hong Kong on Aug. 17. “You have the current account increasing, the waves of instabilit­y in the political landscape, and it just becomes the local whipping boy.”

NatWest Markets, ANZ Banking Group and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are among those who are bearish on the currency. Philippine Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez said last week that the peso’s slump is mainly due to a deteriorat­ing trade outlook because of rising imports of capital goods, which is “normal for a country that is growing very fast.” On Thursday, GMA News reportedth­at Economic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia had said an exchange rate of 52 to the dollar would be acceptable.

The currency has become an obvious target for selling as tensions have risen, Innes said – not only domestical­ly but more widely with internatio­nal concerns such as North Korea’s nuclear saberrattl­ing.

There are no signs that Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas plans to intervene to stem the currency’s losses. “It’s still too early to say,” Ben Luk, global macro strategist with State Street Global Markets, said in a phone interview. “I expect them to be at a plateau level right now.”

Jonathan Ravelas, chief market strategist at Banco de Oro Unibank Inc., sees no need for the central bank to intervene heavily. Fluctuatio­ns have been limited and the peso is bound to recover given that the economic fundamenta­ls remain generally sound, he said.

“Once the tax reform comes in and more infrastruc­ture is built we may see the peso recover,” Ravelas added. “This is like the darkest hour just before dawn.” (Bloomberg)

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