- Traders await US PCE data due out later in day
- All Asian currencies set to end 1H in red
- Equities mixed over 1H; Taiwan set for around 29% gain
Asian currencies and stocks gained some ground on Friday and continued to trade in a tight range as caution prevailed ahead of a key U.S. inflation data, after a subdued week of trading impacted by the Federal Reserve’s cautious stance on rate cuts.
The Singapore dollar <SGD=> rose by 0.1%, while the Malaysian ringgit <MYR=> and the Thai baht <THB=TH> were largely unchanged.
“While a firm U.S. dollar and domestic (Thai) politics serve as near-term headwinds for the currency, we retain our sanguine outlook for the Thai baht in the later part of this year,” analysts at MUFG said in a client note.
Legal challenges against Thai politicians, including PM Srettha Thavisin, unsettled domestic politics and financial markets, adding uncertainty to Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy.
Traders keenly await the U.S. personal consumption expenditures (PCE) data, due later in the day, for insights into the Federal Reserve’s policy direction, while also preparing for a wave of inflation data expected next week from Indonesia, South Korea, the Philippines, and Thailand to gauge the potential trajectory of regional monetary policies.
The South Korean won <KRW=KFTC> was up 0.7% after data showed the country’s central bank sold a net $1.82 billion in the first quarter to arrest the local unit’s decline.
The Taiwan dollar <TWD=TP> advanced by 0.3% and logged its third straight week of gains.
In the first half of 2024, the baht, the won and Indonesian rupiah <IDR=>, and the Philippine peso <PHP=> faced substantial declines between 5% and 7%, ranking them as some of the weakest currencies in emerging Asian markets.
Conversely, the Indian rupee <INR=IN> emerged as the strongest performer in the region, experiencing only a slight depreciation of 0.3% year-to-date, buoyed by improving economic fundamentals and foreign investment inflows.
Equities in the region advanced on Friday, with shares in Jakarta <.JKSE> adding 1.6%, while those in Manila <.PSI>, Seoul <.KS11>, and Taipei <.TWII> were up between 0.3% and 0.6%.
Equities in the first half of 2024 displayed mixed results with South Korean, Malaysian and Indian shares poised to end the half-year with gains of 5.2% to 11.1%, while Taiwan shares surged nearly 28.5%, bolstered by strong performance in chip stocks.
HIGHLIGHTS:
- ** Indian bond yields seen easing on global index inclusion
- ** Bank of Mexico holds its benchmark interest rate
- ** Argentina’s lower house approves Milei’s economic reform bill
- ** Dollar breaks 161 yen in countdown to U.S. inflation release
Asia stock indexes and currencies at 0821 GMT | ||||||
COUNTRY | FX RIC | FX DAILY % | FX YTD % | INDEX | STOCKS DAILY % | STOCKS YTD % |
Japan | <JPY=> | -0.09 | -12.32 | <.N225> | #VALUE! | #VALUE! |
China | <CNY=CFXS> | +0.04 | -2.32 | <.SSEC> | 0.73 | -0.25 |
India | <INR=IN> | +0.02 | -0.28 | <.NSEI> | 0.08 | 10.73 |
Indonesia | <IDR=> | +0.15 | -5.96 | <.JKSE> | 1.58 | -2.68 |
Malaysia | <MYR=> | +0.02 | -2.69 | <.KLSE> | 0.15 | 9.12 |
Philippines | <PHP=> | +0.27 | -5.42 | <.PSI> | 0.33 | -0.59 |
S.Korea | <KRW=KFTC> | +0.66 | -6.44 | <.KS11> | 0.49 | 5.37 |
Singapore | <SGD=> | +0.14 | -2.75 | <.STI> | -0.27 | 2.90 |
Taiwan | <TWD=TP> | +0.25 | -5.29 | <.TWII> | 0.55 | 28.45 |
Thailand | <THB=TH> | +0.08 | -7.08 | <.SETI> | -0.84 | -8.29 |
—Reporting by Roshan Thomas in Bengaluru; Editing by Janane Venkatraman