Malaysia’s ringgit and Indonesia’s rupiah yesterday led an emerging market rally against the US dollar, while Asian equities also pushed higher after minutes from the US Federal Reserve’s latest policy meeting suggested it could keep borrowing costs at record lows into next year.
Energy firms tracked a surge in oil prices as hopes for crude demand picked up and ongoing crises in the Middle East fanned supply worries.
The gains across assets come after a painful July-September quarter that saw trillions wiped off global markets owing to worries about the state of China’s economy and an expected US interest rate hike.
On Thursday, minutes from the Fed’s closely watched September policy board meeting showed some members were concerned about China’s struggles, the strong dollar and persistently low inflation.
“Recent global and financial market developments might restrain economic activity somewhat as a result of the higher level of the dollar and possible effects of slower economic growth in China and in a number of emerging market and commodity producing economies,” the minutes said.
Expectations through most of the year had been for the Fed to hike rates by next year as the world’s No. 2 economy picks up pace.
However, with China suffering a growth slowdown — to levels not seen in a quarter of a century — and other developed and developing economies under pressure, policymakers have held off firing the gun.
The chances of a move were hammered in August when Beijing surprisingly devalued its yuan currency, fueling worries about the Asian economic giant, while below-par jobs data released on Friday last week also struck a blow.
The minutes lit a fire under struggling emerging market currencies, with the ringgit surging 3.3 percent and rupiah 3.4 percent higher. The ringgit has soared about 8 percent this week, its best five-day run in 17 years.
Talk of a Fed rate rise has hurt emerging markets — particularly struggling Malaysia and Indonesia — as dealers have for months been withdrawing cash to the US looking for better, safer returns.
“The latest minutes clearly suggest that international factors are an unusually large determinant of US policy deliberations,” Matthew Sherwood, head of investment strategy at Perpetual Ltd in Sydney, wrote in an e-mail to clients. “This, combined with the weak September US nonfarm payrolls report indicate that the hurdle for a US rate hike has increased further, which was music to the ears of investors.”
The won climbed 1.2 percent, the Australian dollar was 0.4 percent higher and the Thai baht edged up 0.5 percent.
Share markets also extended a run of gains as confidence returns to trading floors, with most regional exchanges more than 1 percent higher. Tokyo jumped 1.64 percent by the close and Sydney ended 1.33 percent higher, while Shanghai ended 1.27 percent up and Hong Kong gained 0.46 percent.
There were also big gains for Singapore, Jakarta and Bangkok.
“Some long positions on the dollar have been reduced quite significantly, benefiting emerging-market currencies,” Singapore-based Commonwealth Bank currency strategist Andy Ji said.
However, he added that although Asian currencies “benefit from a delay in Fed’s policy normalization, you can’t escape the fact that China’s economic performance is still very sub-par. Sentiment could sour if Chinese data continue to disappoint.”
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