Ringgit at 2 year high

Filed Under (Other News) by Webmaster on 02-08-2010

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The ringgit rose to a new two-year high yesterday against the US dollar and was the second biggest daily gainer behind the won, as persistent worries about the economic health in the West drove investors to Asian markets in search of higher returns.

Analysts said the ringgit’s rise was underpinned by relatively sound economic fundamentals at home and around the region, as well as a bullish technical view on the currency.

With the US, Japan and much of Europe forced to keep rates at near zero, international investors are flocking back into markets with higher yielding currencies.

To some extent, massive inflows into the region again raised concerns about speculative fund movement, although some analysts viewed the recent rally as receiving a lot more interest from sovereign and real money funds – such as from pension and insurance firms.

“Having said that, a major reversal in sentiment could still see a sizeable adjustment given the size of foreign funds parked in Asia, even if you don’t want to refer to these funds as the traditional hot money as we all know and loathe,” said Nizam Idris, a Singapore-based currency strategist at UBS AG.

It was estimated that foreign investors bought almost a net US$9bil of stocks in India, Indonesia, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam and Pakistan in July, although no figures were available for China and Malaysia.

Official statistics released by Bank Negara last Friday showed overseas funds raised their holdings of ringgit-denominated bonds for a fourth straight month to RM96.1bil in June.

They owned RM59bil worth of government bonds, the highest level since records began in 1970, according to a Bloomberg report.

“The ringgit is riding up on this wave of foreign money coming into the market,” said Anthony Dass, head of research at Inter Pacific Securities.

The ringgit advanced 0.7% yesterday against the US dollar to 3.1595. So far this year, the local unit had appreciated 8.4% to lead Asian currencies’ gain against the greenback.

“We remain bullish on the ringgit and foresee a retest of 3.07 if it breaks below 3.16 soon,” RHB Research Institute wrote yesterday in a technical outlook for the ringgit.

Bank Negara was the first Asian central bank to lift rates early this year as it sought to “normalise” domestic borrowing cost from a record low. The central bank had so far increased the benchmark overnight policy rate (OPR) three times at 25 basis point each time. The market is projecting the OPR to end the year at 3%, which means there could be one more 25 basis point hike in the coming months.

Analysts believed that the recent rate hikes were the major driver for the currency’s surge.

With the economic recovery gaining traction across Asia, policymakers are moving away from crisis-fighting mode and have become increasingly concern about inflation in the home market.

A number of Asian central banks have raised interest rates in recent months and Indonesia could follow soon after consumer prices in the country rose sharper than expected in July.

Meanwhile, the US economy grew at a slower pace than expected in the second quarter, stoking fears that the recovery in the world’s largest economy is faltering.

AmResearch economist Manokaran Mottain wrote yesterday that the US economy “looks weak’’ and was still dependent on public policy support.

“To withdraw it too soon risks plunging the economy back into recession,” he said, adding that the US was expected to keep interest rates low for “an extended period.”

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Ringgit continues its climb

Filed Under (Other News) by Webmaster on 08-04-2010

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Ringgit

The ringgit continued to strengthen yesterday as rising optimism the economy will grow faster than predicted whetted foreign investors’ appetite for local assets, including stocks and bonds.

The World Bank yesterday raised its forecast for economic growth in East Asia to 8.7% for 2010, up from its previous prediction of 7.8% growth last November.

It also expects the Malaysian economy to grow at a faster rate of 5.7% this year, compared with its earlier forecast of 4.1% made in November.

The FTSE Bursa Malaysia KL Composite Index (FBM KLCI) eked out a 0.72-point gain yesterday to close at 1,345.09 points. The stock market yardstick had risen uninterrupted since March 23.

“Foreign money is flowing into the equity and bond markets spurred by strong growth prospects and favourable government policy moves,’’ said Zulkiflee Nidzam, the head of foreign exchange and bond trading at Asian Finance Bank Bhd (AFB).

A local bank-backed brokerage yesterday predicted foreign investors might increase their holdings of ringgit-denominated government securities to RM70bil by year-end, up from its previous forecast of RM65bil made in January.

Meanwhile, a Bloomberg report yesterday quoted Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak as saying in Singapore that the Malaysian economy may exceed Bank Negara’s growth estimates this year with the right “policy intervention.”

The country’s gross domestic product (GDP) this year, he said, could expand by 1% to 2% more than Bank Negara’s forecast in March of at least 4.5%.

The ringgit yesterday was traded to a 23-month high of 3.192 against the US dollar, before it settled at 3.211.

Year-to-date, the local currency had advanced 6.7% against the greenback to make it the best performer among active currencies in Asia.

Bank Negara was among the first central banks in Asia Pacific to raise key interest rates on March 4, after Vietnam and Australia, as policymakers expect economic growth to strengthen further.

“Based on the extremely hawkish March 4 statement released by the monetary policy committee, there is a strong likelihood that the overnight policy rate (OPR) will be raised again at the May 13 meeting,’’ MIDF Research said in a strategy report dated April 5.

It expects the OPR will rise to between 2.75% and 3% by the end of the year, from 2.25% currently.

The recent rate increase and the prospect for further hikes are supportive of the ringgit’s further rise.

“Conventional wisdom is that rising interest rates are bad for equity, but rates are rising in Malaysia in the context of a growing economy,” MIDF said,

A similar thing happened in 2006, when local stocks advanced 22% while average lending rates rose 45 basis points and GDP growth accelerated to 5.9%.

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Ringgit to be rangebound next week

Filed Under (Other News) by Webmaster on 22-03-2010

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Ringgit

The ringgit is expected to be in rangebound trade next week on the back of speculation that the Chinese Yuan will be revalued, dealers said.

As for the greenback, the currency is expected to gain further strength as worries over the debt crisis of the Euro zone continues, they added.

According to Prudential Fund Management Bhd, speculation on the Chinese yuan’s revaluation had somewhat boosted Asian currencies during the week, despite the stronger US dollar.

It also said in its research note that the US dollar continued to remain attractive compared to the euro, due to the Euro zone sovereign risk issue.

Besides that, Asian central banks are likely to raise rates this year.But rates are expected to remain lower than pre-crisis levels, given especially the prevailing moderate inflation.

During the week just ended, the local currency was traded rangebound and managed to hit a new 19-month high of 3.2980/3010 at Wednesday’s close.

At the end of trade this week, the ringgit rose against the US dollar to 3.3020/3050 from 3.3055/3085 previously.

Against the Singapore dollar, it increased to 2.3653/3697 from 2.3675/3719 last Friday and improved against the Japanese yen to 3.6486/6544 from 3.6501/6558 previously.

The local unit also appreciated against the euro to 4.4861/4905 from 4.5355/5399 but declined against the British pound to 4.9996/5.0051 from 4.9956/5.0011 previously.

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