Malaysia’s reserves edge up on sign of scaled back intervention
Page 1 of 1
Malaysia’s reserves edge up on sign of scaled back intervention
- WORLD
[size=28]Malaysia’s reserves edge up on sign of scaled back intervention
By Bloomberg / Bloomberg | September 4, 2015 : 6:47 PM MYTKUALA LUMPUR (Sept 4): Malaysia’s foreign-exchange reserves picked up slightly in the last two weeks of August, signaling the central bank may have scaled back its intervention to slow losses in the ringgit, this year’s worst-performing Asian currency.
The holdings rose 0.2% to US$94.7 billion as of Aug 28 from the previous fortnight, Bank Negara Malaysia reported Friday. That’s up from US$94.5 billion in the prior two weeks, the lowest since the aftermath of the global credit crunch in 2009. The reserves are enough to finance 7.4 months of retained imports and are 1 times the nation’s short-term external debt, according to a central bank statement.
As the ringgit plunged 18% this year, the foreign- exchange reserves have dropped by the same magnitude. While the decline is an area of concern, it doesn’t pose an immediate threat to the country’s A- credit, Kyran Curry, Standard & Poor’s director of sovereign and international public finance ratings, said in an interview Thursday. Moody’s Investors Service sovereign analyst Christian de Guzman said on Aug 27 that while they remain sufficient, their adequacy is the weakest in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
“With the government allowing continued free flow of capital, we just have to accept the fact that there’s going to be further downward adjustment in external reserves,” Suhaimi Ilias, chief economist at Maybank Investment Bank Bhd.in Kuala Lumpur, said before the data. “Our view is, that at the very least we should expect reserves to fall to around $85 billion to $87 billion,” he said, without specifying a timeframe.
The ringgit is Asia’s worst performer this year and in July, had breached the 3.8 a dollar level which it was pegged at from 1998 to 2005. It tumbled to a 17-year low of 4.2990 a dollar on Aug 26 and closed at 4.2585 on Friday. The government reiterated this week that it will not impose capital controls as it did during the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis.
Malaysia’s currency is being hit harder than those of its neighbors by the slide in commodity prices because it’s Asia’s only major net oil exporter. Brent crude has slumped by about half in the past year. A looming U.S. interest-rate increase, an economic slowdown in China and a political scandal involving Prime Minister Najib Razak are also weighing on the ringgit.
Malaysia has held more reserves than it needed “precisely for reversals” and the ringgit will better reflect domestic fundamentals when there’s more certainty of policies in major economies, central bank Governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz said on Aug 20. The monetary authority will set about rebuilding its holdings, Zeti said on Aug 13
[/size]
Cals- Administrator
- Posts : 25277 Credits : 57721 Reputation : 1766
Join date : 2011-09-08
Location : global
Comments : “My plan of trading was sound enough and won oftener that it lost. If I had stuck to it Iâ€d have been right perhaps as often as seven out of ten times.â€
Stock Exposure : Technical Analysis / Fundamental Analysis / Mental Analysis
Similar topics
» Bank Negara foreign reserves edge down to US$134.8b
» Edge Weekly The State of the Nation: Bank Negara unlikely to revisit ringgit peg By Cindy Yeap / The Edge Malaysia | February 10, 2015 : 3:00 PM MYT
» Malaysia to use state funds to lift stocks, rules out FX intervention
» Govt intervention needed to correct investment imbalance between Malaysia and China, says NCCIM
» Malaysia's c.bank reserves at $133.1 bln on Jan 30
» Edge Weekly The State of the Nation: Bank Negara unlikely to revisit ringgit peg By Cindy Yeap / The Edge Malaysia | February 10, 2015 : 3:00 PM MYT
» Malaysia to use state funds to lift stocks, rules out FX intervention
» Govt intervention needed to correct investment imbalance between Malaysia and China, says NCCIM
» Malaysia's c.bank reserves at $133.1 bln on Jan 30
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
|
|