Currencies

Asian FX bears firm as investors mull timeline of US rate cuts: Reuters poll


Investors raised short positions on emerging Asian currencies, with bearish bets on the Indonesian rupiah jumping sharply, as the US dollar remained resilient amid uncertainty over the timeline of the Federal Reserve’s interest rate cuts, a Reuters poll showed on Thursday (Mar 4).

Short positions on the Indonesian rupiah strengthened to their highest since Nov 2, while those on the Thai baht jumped to their highest since October 2022, according to a fortnightly poll of 11 analysts.

Recent solid US manufacturing activity and labour market data have cast a shadow over the quantum of Fed rate cuts this year, supporting the greenback.

“Ahead of the non-farm payrolls data on Friday, we believe there continues to be USD buying bias in the FX market,” said Ryota Abe, an economist with Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.

“Under the circumstances, there are few incentives for traders to buy Asian currencies,” he added.

Bearish bets on the rupiah firmed on the back of accelerating inflation in Southeast Asia’s largest economy. The fall in the currency on Monday had prompted the central bank to intervene in the foreign exchange market.

With an imminent move towards the psychological 16,000-level, analysts believe that a rate hike from Bank Indonesia may not be out of the cards.

“Speculation is that a one-sided depreciating bias in the currency might revive rate hike bets, akin to the one-off move in October 2023,” Radhika Rao, senior economist at DBS said in a note.

Elsewhere, Chinese central bank authorities also intervened to prevent further sinking in the yuan, with markets expecting more depreciation in store.

Moreover, the baht has come under pressure due to a softer growth in Thailand’s tourism-reliant economy, a dividend payout season for foreign investors, and dissenting opinions over rate cuts between the government and central bank, multiple analysts said.

Bearish positions on the Taiwan dollar and the South Korean won were a notch higher, reaching their highest since early November.

Poon Panichpibool, a markets strategist with Krung Thai Bank, said he expects the Taiwan dollar and the South Korean won to be “quite volatile should tech stocks come under correction, which could happen as these stocks have been rising significantly lately”.

Meanwhile, investors who had been slightly bullish on the Indian rupee so far this year, have now pared back their bets to turn neutral owing to concerns over the Fed’s stance on interest rates.



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