The currencies of several major Asian oil importers are ripe for depreciation with the spike in international crude oil prices, analysts at Barclays said on Tuesday. The surge in oil prices in recent days “implies risks for most Asian FX in the near term, especially if oil prices move even higher in the event of a potential escalation in the conflict,” Barclays’ analysts wrote in a note to clients carried by Bloomberg. Thailand’s baht, the Taiwanese dollar, and the Korean won are the Asian currencies most at risk of depreciation, according to...
The Indian rupee's muted reaction in the face of a persistent decline in the dollar has stirred up confusion among bankers, with some citing foreign portfolio and corporate payment-related dollar outflows as reasons for the rupee lagging among peers. On the day, most Asian currencies rose between 0.1% to 0.6% versus the U.S. dollar but the rupee was little changed at 85.61. A similar pattern persisted throughout May, with the rupee declining by about 1% on the month so far even as its regional peers gained. The Korean won, for...