Khaleej Times

Goldman says sell Asia currencies

- Justina Lee — Bloomberg

taipei — It’s time to sell Asian currencies after their best monthly rally in more than seven years, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

The currencies will resume declines as further easing in China and Japan is likely to push the yuan and yen to their weakest levels since at least 2008, says Kamakshya Trivedi, a strategist at the bank who correctly predicted in November that emerging markets would recover in 2016. South Korea’s won led the March rally with an 8.2 per cent advance and Malaysia’s ringgit’s 7.8 per cent jump was its biggest since 1998. A gauge of 10 Asian currencies excluding the yen rose three per cent.

“These are good levels to short Asian currencies, especially the won, baht, Taiwan dollar, yuan and ringgit,” said Trivedi, Goldman’s chief emerging-market macro strategist in London, in an interview. “There are very direct implicatio­ns for emerging-market currencies in Asia from yuan moves. We forecast more weakness across this currency complex.”

Developing-nation exchange rates completed their strongest month since at least 1999 as commoditie­s rebounded and the dollar slumped on bets after the Federal Reserve signaled it will move slowly in raising US interest rates. However, Asian exports are yet to recover, raising the prospects for a fresh wave of devaluatio­ns across the region as the yuan depreciate­s against China’s trade partners and expectatio­ns mount for additional monetary stimulus in Japan.

Goldman predicts a 14 per cent plunge in the yen to 130 per dollar in the next 12 months, a level last seen in 2002, and a 7.4 per cent drop in the yuan to seven versus the greenback, which would be the weakest since May 2008. The won will decline almost 12 per

Top currency trader says too soon to buy dollars despite data

cent from current levels to 1,300 in the period, according to Trivedi, who recommends shorting the Korean currency as the best way to position for the projected reversal in Asian exchange rates.

Slowing economic growth and prospects of further rate cuts in South Korea make Asia’s fourthlarg­est economy “a place where there are many ways to be right,” he said.

Goldman’s prediction­s for the yen, yuan and and the won are more bearish than most. The Japanese currency is forecast to weaken to 118 per dollar at the end of March 2017, its Chinese counterpar­t is seen at 6.7 versus the greenback in the same period and the South Korean won is projected at 1,218, according to the median estimates in separate Bloomberg surveys. The yen rose 0.1 per cent to 111.58 per dollar as of 10:20am in London and the won climbed 0.7 per cent to 1,146.13 as investors maintained bets the Fed will proceed cautiously on raising rates. Markets in China are shut on Monday for a holiday.

At their March meeting, Fed policy officials forecast two rate increases this year, compared with four in their December estimates and three expected by Goldman. Futures contracts indicate a 62 per cent probabilit­y the US central bank will raise rates this year, with the most likely scenario being a single hike. There’s still a risk policy makers will act faster as US data improves, which would boost the dollar and derail recent rallies in the yuan and yen, Trivedi said.

While the yuan has advanced 0.45 per cent versus the dollar this year, its nominal effective exchange rate has dropped the most in the region, according to Westpac Banking Corp’s indexes. Even when the greenback rebounds, China would want to retain tradeweigh­ted losses to boost exports and maintain loose monetary conditions amid slowing economic growth, according to Goldman.

“That means the yuan would weaken versus the dollar,” Trivedi said. “If you see further depreciati­on of the yuan, either on a tradeweigh­ted basis or versus the dollar, it does mean these economies whose exports have already been suffering quite a bit could see further pressure and require further depreciati­on to keep their exports on a firm footing.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? Developing-nation exchange rates completed their strongest month since 1999 as commoditie­s rebounded and dollar slumped.
— Reuters Developing-nation exchange rates completed their strongest month since 1999 as commoditie­s rebounded and dollar slumped.

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