Central banks making moves to check appreciating currencies against US dollar
A number of central banks have been making moves to shake up their currencies over the past few months.
Faced with slowing global growth and lower inflation – disinflation or 
deflation in a number of countries – central banks started taking action
 primarily by cutting interest rates or injecting liquidity into the 
system.
From Japan increasing its monetary stimulus to Singapore putting the 
brakes
 on its currency’s appreciation against a trade-weighted basket of 
currencies, stemming currency appreciation has led to talk that a 
currency war could be brewing.
Using the value of currencies to boost trade-heavy economies has been the flavour, as global economic growth slows.
The International Monetary Fund cut its global growth outlook from 3.8% 
to 3.5% this year and with growth easing in China, Europe and a number 
of emerging economies, giving support to such economies has been the 
focus of governments.
The European Central Bank instituted its own quantitative easing (QE) 
policy on Jan 22 to get growth going in the European Union. 
The effectiveness of that policy has been questioned, but the immediate 
result was that the euro, which has been weakening against the US 
dollar, continued to fall against the greenback.
With Japan flooding the market with liquidity to get growth and 
inflation going with its own QE, the result has been a marked weakness 
in the currency.
The yen’s steep depreciation against the dollar, according to reports, 
is causing uneasiness in South Korea, which competes almost head-to-head
 with Japan in the export markets.
What is allowing countries that have taken action to cut their interest rates has been the slowing inflation.
The steep fall in 
crude oil prices
 since June last year to below US$50 a barrel has eased inflationary 
pressure worldwide, as energy is usually the biggest component of 
inflation. It’s been reported that over the past six months, 18 out of 
50 MSCI countries have cut rates.
The Reserve Bank of India, which has an inflation targeting policy, cut 
interest rates this month. India, along with Denmark, Switzerland, 
Canada, Egypt and Turkey, has cut interest rates this month itself.
That was followed by Singapore’s move to slow its rise against a basket 
of currencies, which saw the Singapore dollar continue its recent drop 
against the US dollar.
Falling inflation was the primary reason for the Monetary Authority of 
Singapore (MAS) to make its pre-emptive move to slow down the 
appreciation of its currency by reducing the pace of increase. But quite
 a number do not pin that move as a significant competitiveness boost.
“The adjustment does not translate into a massive competitiveness 
impact,” says Saktiandi Supaat, Malayan Banking Bhd’s head of foreign 
exchange (forex) research based in Singapore.
MAS’ next policy statement will be due in April where it could give some
 clarity on the competitiveness angle, but the drop in the Singapore 
dollar against the greenback does help to boost inflation, which is 
expected to be lower than had been earlier estimated. The previous 
outlook was for a -0.5% to 0.5% rise in inflation.
A slower rate of appreciation would also help Singapore’s economy, which
 is already dealing with cost pressures from a tight labour market where
 the unemployment rate was a meagre 1.6%.
Furthermore, with non-oil domestic exports reportedly dropping for the 
past two years, a weaker Singapore dollar will help, especially when 
exports to China and the United States have fallen on a year-on-year 
basis.
Pressure is also emerging in Thailand, where the stronger baht is also not helping with exports, which dropped 0.4% last year.
Finance Minister Sommai Phasee was recently reported to have said that 
the Thai central bank should “in theory” lower borrowing costs, and that
 exports are under pressure from a stronger baht.
Fundamentals back appreciation
The Philippine peso and the baht are two currencies in this region that 
have in recent months seen an appreciation against the dollar. The 
reason for this is that the fundamentals of these economies have 
improved.
“The Philippines is not reliant on commodities as much as Malaysia, 
Indonesia and Thailand and that is the biggest driver of its currency,” 
says a currency strategist in Singapore.
“It just registered its strongest gross domestic product (GDP) growth over three years since the 1950s.”
The Philippine economy grew by 6.1% last year after expanding by 7.2% in 2013.
Thailand, recovering from floods and political unrest, has also been a flavour for foreign investors since stability returned.
Its 
stock
 market in US dollar terms is now bigger than Bursa Malaysia and one of 
the reasons for the currency’s rise is the drop in oil prices.
The fall in crude oil prices is expected to have the biggest economic 
benefit to Thailand and the Philippines among countries in this region, 
according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
“Lower oil prices have not resulted in any sizeable GDP growth upgrade 
as yet for emerging Asia, in part because of slowing global growth 
outside the United States.
“Lower oil prices have, however, improved the trade surplus 
significantly, supporting the current account balance and FX reserves 
positions.
“Lower oil prices have also resulted in a sharp drop in inflation, 
particularly in Thailand, the Philippines and India, which has allowed 
central banks to stay accommodative. Emerging Asian countries will 
likely see a boost to GDP growth in the range of +10bp to +45bp with 
every 10% fall in oil prices, if the oil price drop was purely a supply 
shock,” it says in a note.
The low-inflation environment will also allow central banks in this region to become more accommodative.
“Lower crude oil prices and loose global monetary policy will likely 
keep inflation lower in 2015 with rising probability of rate cuts in 
Asean,” says Morgan Stanley in a note.
How low will the ringgit go?
The past three months have been a volatile period for global currencies 
and no more so when it comes to the ringgit, which is the second-worst 
performing currency in Asia against the US dollar over the past 12 
months after the yen.
Directly, the drop in crude oil prices has affected the fundamentals of 
Malaysia and carved a chunk out of government revenue, as receipts from 
crude oil production account for slightly less than 30% of income.
With revenues depleted, the Government has revised its budget for this 
year to take into account crude oil averaging US$55 a barrel in 2015 
from an earlier projection that it would average US$105 a barrel when 
the budget was announced last October.
The revised budget also led to a slight increase in the fiscal deficit to 3.2% of GDP from an earlier projection of 3%.
That percentage is lower than the 3.5% target for 2014.
Apart from fiscal discipline, the ringgit’s fortunes have been loosely linked to the price of crude oil.
With this July marking the 10th year when the ringgit peg to the US 
dollar was lifted, the decision to remove the RM3.80 to the US dollar 
peg was to ensure that the ringgit reflected the fundamentals of the 
economy.
Prior to that decision, the price of crude oil had started to rise, delivering valuable additional revenue to the Government.
When the peg was lifted, brent crude oil was trading at US$55.72 a 
barrel, and over the years, the ringgit loosely tracked the value of 
crude oil, often appreciating against the dollar when crude oil prices 
were high and weakening when crude oil prices dropped.
Anecdotally, the ringgit gained strength against the dollar when oil 
prices soared and approached the RM3 to the dollar mark when crude oil 
hit more than US$140 in 2008.
It dropped in value as crude oil prices retreated from there, and as 
crude oil prices went up again and stayed at elevated levels for a 
prolonged period, the ringgit then crossed the RM3 level into the RM2.90
 range.
Forex strategists say sentiment does affect the movement of a currency, 
but it moves in parallel with the fundamentals of an economy. With 
Malaysia’s fortunes closely linked to the price of crude oil, it is 
inevitable that the thinking of the country’s fundamentals will also 
change.
“If energy prices continue to drop, then it will hurt the ringgit,” says a forex strategist based in Singapore.
Bank Negara governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz recently said the 
ringgit, which is currently trading at multi-year lows against the US 
dollar, did not reflect Malaysia’s strong underlying fundamentals.
“Once the global events settle down and stabilise, the ringgit will 
trend towards our underlying fundamentals,” Zeti told reporters at an 
event.
Apart from lower crude oil prices, the ringgit has also been hurt by capital outflows.
Malaysia’s forex reserves in the first two weeks of January were at its 
lowest level since March 2011 and foreign investors held 44% of 
Malaysian Government Securities (MGS) as of the end of last year.
Analysts say while foreigners have sold off a chunk of government debt, 
the remaining are not expected to do so as long as they are making a 
decent return on their holdings. The rise in the value of the 10-year 
MGS will give support to their holdings.
A number of forex analysts think the ringgit will not slip below RM3.70 
to the US dollar, but some do admit they did not think it would be 
trading at the current level of around RM3.63 a few months ago.
“If it does go to RM3.80, then people will get panicky,” says one forex analyst.
By Jagdev. Singh Sidhu The Star/ANN
Semiconductor and rubber glove makers to gain from weak ringgit
 Kenanga
 Research believes that the semiconductor industry will stay resilient 
with the global sales continuing to show healthy momentum.
Kenanga
 Research believes that the semiconductor industry will stay resilient 
with the global sales continuing to show healthy momentum. 
THE decline of the ringgit is generally viewed as a problem for the economy but there are always two sides to the story.
Exporters with high local ringgit-denominated content and strong 
external demand are the obvious winners as they are expected to benefit 
from the weakening ringgit.
The winners are said to be the semiconductor and technology, rubber 
gloves and timber-based sectors. The share prices of a number of those 
companies have already factored in the benefits to their business from 
the weaker ringgit after the currency started its decline,which was more
 pronounced since the beginning of the fourth quarter of last year.
On the semiconductor front, Kenanga Research says believes that industry
 will stay resilient with the global sales continuing to show healthy 
momentum. Bottom-fishing is recommended as a strategy especially with 
the current risk-reward ratio less favourable following rich valuations 
in some counters.
“Typically, first and last quarters of a calender year, the earnings for the semiconductor players are seasonally weaker.
“That said we see any price weakness in these stocks as opportunities to
 accumulate as the earnings shortfall could be made up by the seasonally
 stronger second and third quarters on the back of the resilient 
industry prospects,” it says in a recent report.
Screening through the semiconductor value chain, Kenanga Research sees 
Vitrox Corp Bhd, being the leading solution providers of automated 
vision inspection systems to continue benefiting from the increasing 
complexity of semiconductor packages, which requires enormous 
inspection.
The research house is sanguine over OSAT (outsourced chips assembly and 
testing) players such as Unisem (M) Bhd. Inari Amertron Bhd is among the
 research house’s top pick.
PIE industrial Bhd managing director Alvin Mui says the group would see its sales rising this first quarter.
“But this is due to the new box built products we are doing for the medical equipment segment.
“The weakened ringgit will of course boost our revenue and bottom line,” Mui says.
Meanwhile, Elsoft Research Bhd chief executive officer CE Tan says the 
weak ringgit has boosted orders for its LED test equipment for the first
 quarter of this year.
“We expect to perform by a strong double digit percentage growth over the same period last year,” he says.
Tan says the LED testers the group produces are niche products with competitive pricing.
Rubber gloves players have seen strong price appreciation since late 
last year. Maybank IB Research likes Kossan Rubber Industries Bhd due to
 its stronger earnings growth in financial years 2015 and 2016, 
underpinned by the full contributios of its latest three plants.
Meanhile, JF Apex Securities mentions Latitude Tree, Poh Huat and 
Heveaboard among the timber-based industry stocks that can benefit from 
strengthening US dollar against ringgit.
The US market is the biggest for the industry which will gain from 
cheaper ringgit-denominated local content and stronger US economic 
growth.
The losers from a weaker ringgit, JF Apex Securities Bhd senior analyst 
Lee Cherng Wee mentions, are automotive players which import a lot of 
parts especially for completely-knocked down vehicles.
Lee says counters such as Tan Chong Motors and UMW Holdings are likely to be affected.
RHB Research in a recent report says about 60% of Tan Chong’s 
manufacturing cost of sales is transacted in foreign currency (80% in US
 dollars) which RHB sees as a risk.
“Continued US dollar strength will crimp margins that will not be offset by a weaker Japanese yen,” it says.
Lee also predicts the consumer sector players with high imported content
 in dollar terms could risk slimmer margins coupled with sluggish 
consumer sentiment due to goods and services tax.
MIDF Investment Research analyst Kelvin Ong said he foresees banking 
groups with higher foreign shareholdings like CIMB Group Holdings Bhd, 
Alliance Financial Group Bhd, AMMB Holdings Bhd and Public Bank Bhd as 
banks that can be impacted by the weaker ringgit.
“Foreign shareholding may slip if the domestic currency continues to 
weaken. The Fed’s tightening of the interest rate turns out to be more 
aggressive than expected, and crude oil prices continue to be on a 
downward trend. This will impact valuations of banks, but on the flip 
side, it will present buying opportunities for investors on a more 
attractive valuation,’’ he says.
By Sharidan M. Ali and David Tan The Star/ANN
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