Philippine Daily Inquirer

Citi also bullish on PH, other Asian economies

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GLOBAL banking group Citi has joined the growing list of foreign banks that have turned bullish on Asia, saying key economies in the region are becoming the new “safe haven” for portfolio investment­s on the back of lingering problems in the United States and the Europe.

In a report on its latest outlook for the global economy and for Asia, Citi said emerging markets in Asia were likely to attract more hot money given the changes over the past few years in the contributi­ons of various economies to global growth.

Since the latest global economic crisis, which was punctuated by a recession for many industrial­ized counties in the West in 2009, Asian economies have been drivers of the global economy.

Meantime, the internatio­nal financial services firm also said the shifting policy in China toward a more market-determined exchange rate for the renminbi would attract more in- vestments to the East.

Citi said Asia has been stealing the image of the United States and other advanced economies as a safe haven. “Growing confidence over Asia’s growth resilience, strong external and fiscal balance sheets and expectatio­ns of someAsian currencies decoupling from (the US dollar index) on the back of regime change in China’s foreign exchange policy toward a more market-based RMB (renminbi)

will reinforce the perception of Asian fixed-income market receiving ‘saferhaven’ flows,” Citi said in the report.

In the case of the Philippine­s, foreign portfolio investment­s have been partly credited for fueling the significan­t appreciati­on of the peso so far this year. The local currency, which has touched the 40to-a-dollar level yesterday, has already appreciate­d by nearly 7 percent since the start of the year.

Documents from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas showed that the country recorded a $2.97-billion net inflow of foreign portfolio investment­s since the start of the year to Nov. 9. This was lower than the $3.79 billion in net inflow in the same period last year but was significan­t enough to put an appreciati­on pressure on the peso, traders said.

According to Citi, central banks of some Asian countries might be prompt- ed to implement policies restrictin­g the entry of foreign portfolio investment­s given the exchange-rate volatility that these inflows were causing.

Although foreign investment­s were welcome, economists said too much of such funds could be destabiliz­ing to an economy and the resulting volatility in the exchange rate would be bad for business.

In the case of the Philippine­s, the central bank said it was not poised to impose restrictio­ns on foreign capital flows. While agreeing that excessive foreign portfolio investment­s have adverse consequenc­es, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said outright restrictio­n of foreign capital could drive away even the essential investment­s.

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