Select few emerging Asian economies comfortable with Fed
hikes
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[June 18, 2018]
By Marius Zaharia
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Higher U.S. rates are
rattling many emerging markets in much the same way past tightening
cycles did, but the Federal Reserve's hawkishness could also bring cheer
for a small group of Asian economies that wouldn't mind seeing their
currencies weaken.
Fed rate hikes this year and the prospect of more to come have lifted
Treasury yields, prompting investors to switch out of riskier emerging
market debt and triggering sharp falls in their currencies.
Markets in Argentina, Brazil and Turkey took the biggest hits and in
Asia, the central banks of India, Indonesia and the Philippines have
raised rates and intervened to defend their currencies.
To view a graphic on Asia current account balances, click: https://reut.rs/2Ms4BZl
However, unlike those countries, which run current account deficits,
central banks in external surplus countries and territories such as
Thailand, South Korea, Taiwan and, to a lesser extent, Malaysia won't
feel compelled to keep up with the Fed's rate hikes, analysts say.
"I don't see those countries just being forced by the Fed into action
because some of them have such enormous surpluses that they would
probably be happy to see weaker currencies and capital outflows, at the
margin," said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economic research at
HSBC.
Weaker currencies from portfolio outflows could help lift below-target
inflation and give exporters a shot in the arm at a time of heightened
uncertainty over global trade and signs that the Chinese economy may be
losing steam.
This week's central bank meetings in Thailand and Taiwan are likely to
reinforce that outlook, with most economists seeing at most one rate
hike in Thailand, Taiwan and South Korea over the next 18 months,
compared with the Fed's five or six.
The Philippine peso <PHP=> lost almost 7 percent from January highs and
is now trading at its lowest in 12 years. The Indian rupee <INR=> is
near record lows having lost a similar amount, while the Indonesian
rupiah <IDR=> is down about 5 percent after two rate hikes and heavy
central bank buying.
By contrast, the Korean won <KRW=>, the Thai baht <THB=> and the Taiwan
dollar <TWD=> are all down 3 percent from January levels close to
multi-year highs while their central banks kept rates steady near record
lows.
One of the reasons why the surplus economies are under less pressure is
foreign investor positioning.
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The Federal Reserve headquarters in Washington, U.S., September 16,
2015. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
In deficit countries, investors tend to own shorter-term bonds, which are more
liquid and less risky than longer-term debt. In countries with surpluses,
investors are more comfortable holding longer-term securities.
Since the Fed started raising rates some three years ago, the premium that
Indian and Indonesian short-term bonds offers over their U.S. equivalent
<US2YT=RR> has dropped by roughly 200 basis points. In the Philippines, the
premium has fallen by almost the same amount over the past 12 months.
That differential has narrowed some 200 bps in South Korea, Thailand and Taiwan
as well and has even turned negative. However, investors' greater preference for
longer-term debt has helped limit downward currency pressure.
To view a graphic on Short-term Asia-U.S. yield spreads, click: https://reut.rs/2ycb6MF
Differentials with U.S. 10-year yields shrank 100 bps or less. With the U.S.
curve flattening as the economic cycle approaches its peak, that is likely to
continue.
Another reason why those central banks don't have to track the Fed is that
China's rise as a major economic power means that Asia is less synchronised with
the U.S. cycle than it was before the global financial crisis.
To view a graphic on Emerging Asia's trade with U.S. and China, click: https://reut.rs/2ybRLer
The collapse of the Lehman Brothers in 2008 coincided with the moment when
developing Asia's trade with China surpassed the sums traded with the United
States. Slowing economic momentum in China therefore may have more impact on the
rate outlook in Asia than a peaking U.S. economic cycle.
"Asian economies -- their synchronization with the U.S. economy has weakened
because of China," said Tan Hui, chief market strategist for Asia at J.P.Morgan
Asset Management.
"It's not easy to see many Asian central banks following the Fed."
(This version of the story has been refiled to correct paragraph four to refer
to countries and territories.)
(Reporting by Marius Zaharia; Editing by Sam Holmes)
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