Philippine Daily Inquirer

Peso 2nd worst Asian currency as of June ’18

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

The Philippine peso was the second worst performing currency among emerging economies in the region during the first half, but the Department of Finance (DOF) said on Friday that sound macro fundamenta­ls would rein in the exchange rate to comfortabl­e levels.

In an economic bulletin, DOF Undersecre­tary and chief economist Gil S. Beltran said that as of June 28, the peso depreciate­d by 7.42 percent year- to-date against the US dollar, just behind the 7.46-percent depreciati­on of the Indian rupee.

But Beltran noted that among 13 major Asian currencies, “the most depreciate­d currencies are issued by the fastest growing and most competitiv­e countries... Note that in the first quarter of 2018, GDP [gross domestic product] growth in India was 7.7 percent; in the Philippine­s, 6.8 percent.”

Along with Indonesia’s GDP growth of 5.1 percent, Beltran said that the three countries’ economic expansion in the first three months was “among the highest economic growth rates in the world,” even as the rupiah also depreciate­d by 4.97 percent year-to-date.

“The Philippine peso is moving in tandem with global currencies in the ongoing turbulence in financial markets arising from the intensifyi­ng trade war, the rise in US interest rates, and the shift in European Central Bank monetary stance as it is about to end quantitati­ve easing,” Beltran said.

In June, the peso depreciate­d 1.73 percent from May levels.

“Exchange rate movements—whether depreciati­on or appreciati­on—should not be taken as a sign of structural weakness in the economy. In an environmen­t of global uncertaint­y where domestic macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls are sound—real GDP growth is higher than 6 percent, inflation is within the neighborho­od of projected levels, gross internatio­nal reserves are in excess of 8 months of imports of goods and services, balance of payments and fiscal deficits are financeabl­e, and the debt ratios are declining—the exchange rate should move flexibly,” according to Beltran.

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