Breaking slow: Asia set to raise rates next year, but
still lag Fed
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[December 07, 2017]
By Marius Zaharia
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Tighter monetary
policy is coming to Asia next year. Yet it will lag the Federal
Reserve's rate hikes as Asian central banks balance an exports-led
revival in growth with a slowdown in regional locomotive China.
That will mark a shift from a few months ago when most economists
expected Asian policy makers to hold their ground or even ease further,
but the trade windfall behind a synchronized uptick in global growth is
seen lasting longer.
Last week South Korea took advantage of the trade boom to normalize
policy, lifting rates for the first time in more than six years, and
analysts expect Malaysia and Philippines - where growth has also
benefited from a surge in public investment - to hike in the first
quarter.
With the benefit of hindsight when the Fed in 2013 signaled it was time
to exit ultra-low rates and sparked a taper tantrum, regional central
banks should be more confident of looking at the strength of their own
economies rather than that of the United States.
"The last couple of years has shown us that monetary policy in this
region can decouple from the U.S," said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research
at ANZ.
"Obviously they are cognizant of what the Fed does and capital flows ...
(but) this is not a case of central banks being forced to act just
because the Fed is looking to tighten further."
That de-coupling has been on show in the past two years as Asia shrugged
off four U.S. rate hikes, and some countries even cut rates over that
period.
South Korea was the first major Asian economy to lift rates since
Indonesia's November 2014 move, which was reversed three months later as
markets eventually took the view that a U.S. lift-off won't necessarily
derail global growth.
CHINA FACTOR
Of course, the Fed cannot be totally ignored as it is expected to hike
again next week and two to three more times in 2018. Korea and Malaysia
have some of the lowest real interest rates relative to the United
States since the global financial crisis and were responsible for most
of the net bond market outflows in Asia in October.
Australia and New Zealand could hike later next year, China might raise
its short-term policy rates, while some analysts expect even India and
Indonesia, which have been cutting recently, to reverse their moves.
China is emerging as a key driver of Asia's policy track next year, with
growth in the world's second-biggest economy set to lose momentum as
authorities there extend a year-long crackdown on financial risks.
The numbers show Asia is less dependent on American growth than in the
past.
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The Federal Reserve headquarters in Washington September 16 2015.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
While emerging Asia's trade with the United States has gone up by 40 percent
since the global financial crisis, its trade with China has risen 120 percent,
according to Reuters calculations based on IMF data. Emerging Asia now trades 70
percent more with China than it does with the United States.
That means monetary tightening in the region will lag the Fed, as long as any
capital outflows driven by the narrower rate differentials do not lead to
significantly weaker currencies. Stubbornly low inflation and elevated household
debt may also slow rate hikes in some countries.
"We have a picture where the average Asian central bank hikes less than the
U.S.," said Louis Kuijs, head of Asia economics at Oxford Economics.
"We can argue they can do that without putting pressure on their real economy or
financial sector because first, in some countries like India or Indonesia rates
start from a higher level than in the United States and they have a buffer and
secondly, the dollar would not strengthen a lot."
The good news is that during synchronized global growth the dollar historically
tends to be stable or weaker, suggesting that Asian currencies will likely avoid
a sharp shakeout.
Kuijs expects the 4-8 percent strengthening in Asian currencies this year to
come to a halt in 2018, when some might weaken slightly, but by less than 4
percent. BofA Merrill Lynch sees most currencies flat in 2018.
FLAT CURVES
The other element mitigating the risk of capital outflows is that while
short-term bond yields are rising in the U.S. and Asia in anticipation of higher
rates, long-term yields have remained stable as markets are yet to be convinced
of any global inflationary pressures.
While U.S. two-year yields <US2YT=RR> rose from 1.2 to 1.8 percent this year,
10-year yields <US10YT=RR> dipped 6 basis points to 2.39 percent, still below
South Korean yields <KR10YT=RR>.
"We're pretty comfortable with the monetary policy outlook for Asia," said Bryan
Collins, portfolio manager, fixed income, at Fidelity International, who sees
opportunities in long-dated Asian debt.
(Reporting by Marius Zaharia; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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