The Star Early Edition

Smaller emerging markets slip further

Stocks, currencies in a spin

- Karin Strohecker

SOME major emerging currencies took a breather yesterday after a bruising few days, but many smaller ones were still suffering, while stocks hit fresh multi-year lows on reverberat­ions from the falling yuan.

Russia’s rouble ended six consecutiv­e days of losses to gain 0.2 percent against the dollar following the rout across emerging market currencies sparked by China’s yuan devaluatio­n last Tuesday.

Weaker dollar

A weaker dollar provided some support, as the greenback snapped a four-day winning streak, with investors jittery before US inflation data and minutes of the Federal Reserve’s last policy review.

Investors are still fretting over the health of the world’s second-largest economy as mainland China shares went on a wild ride, tumbling more than 5 percent before soaring again to close higher after state-backed buyers rushed into the market.

“Despite drastic measures (by Chinese policy makers) to support the market there may not be an escape from fundamenta­ls: weak earnings, bleak outlook and still high valuations,” Rabobank’s Piotr Matys wrote in a note to clients, adding that weakness in the Shanghai composite index translated into immediate pressure on commodity currencies.

“The prospect of a further drop in the Shanghai composite index does not bode well for the rouble and the South African rand.”

The Turkish lira fell for the fifth consecutiv­e day after Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Tuesday formally ended attempts to form a new government, raising the prospect of a fractious interim administra­tion and a fresh election.

Smaller currencies were still reeling as domestic woes compounded the rout in emerging assets.

The Thai baht hit a six-year low in the wake of Monday’s bomb blast, Vietnam devalued the dong for the third time this year to boost its exports while policy makers in oil-producing Kazakhstan let the tenge slip almost 5 percent to the top end of the band, fuelling expectatio­ns of an imminent devaluatio­n.

MSCI’s broadest emerging market stocks benchmark slipped 0.4 percent, extending its losses for a fourth day to hit its lowest level since October 2011. Indices in South Korea, Hong Kong, Jakarta and the Gulf chalked up losses.

Emerging Europe fared little better: shares in Prague, Budapest and Athens were all in the red. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? A currency trader gestures in the foreign exchange dealing room of the Korea Exchange Bank headquarte­rs in Seoul, South Korea. Chinese stocks fell more than 5 percent yesterday before recovering, but many other markets were not so fortunate.
PHOTO: AP A currency trader gestures in the foreign exchange dealing room of the Korea Exchange Bank headquarte­rs in Seoul, South Korea. Chinese stocks fell more than 5 percent yesterday before recovering, but many other markets were not so fortunate.

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