Philippine Daily Inquirer

Peso still among

Strongest in Asia

- By Michelle V. Remo

THE PHILIPPINE peso remained one of the fastest appreciati­ng Asian currencies in the first two months of 2013 on the back of a surge in foreign “hot money.”

Closing at 40.66 against the US dollar on Feb. 28, the peso had strengthen­ed by nearly 1 percent since the start of the year.

Data provided by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to the INQUIRER showed that the peso rose by 0.96 percent during the period, the second-fastest rate of appreciati­on among selected actively traded Asian currencies.

The Thai baht appreciate­d the most at 2.96 percent.

On the other hand, other Asian currencies depreciate­d against the US dollar amid suspicion that some central banks were deliberate­ly causing their countries’ currencies to weaken to boost exports.

The Indonesian rupiah weakened by 0.23 percent, the Malaysian rupee fell by 0.91 percent, the Singaporea­n dollar dropped 1.08 percent, and the Japanese yen dropped 6.52 percent.

The continued rise of the peso as of endFebruar­y was attributed mainly to the surge in foreign portfolio investment­s.

The latest monthly data on foreign portfolio investment­s released by the BSP showed that gross inflow hit $2.8 billion in January, more than double the $1.2 billion registered in the same month last year.

The Philippine­s is attracting foreign hot money because of its favorable economic growth performanc­e.

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