By Riza Lozada
The peso recovered somewhat on Friday closing at 49.84/$1 from Thursday’s close of 49.98 after touching P50 per dollar on the same day, the weakest since Nov. 20, 2008, when it traded at 49.99/$1.
Currency traders forecast the peso to remain steady or slightly lower toward the end of the month while recovering in December in anticipation of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting next month.
“It will be a shallow strengthening of peso, if it does,” the trader said.
Asia’s emerging markets have faced outflows since Donald Trump won the US presidential election.
“Emerging markets globally are experiencing fund withdrawals, but what makes the Philippines different, or vulnerable, is its valuation,” said Smith Chua, chief investment officer at Bank of the Philippine Islands, the nation’s second-biggest money manager with the equivalent of $12 billion in assets under management.
“The foreign-exchange movement has also been a significant factor for overseas investors. As the year is heading to a close, some of them want to lock in their gains before the peso weakens further,” he added.
The last time the peso neared 50 to the dollar in 2008 was when the global financial system was melting down, prompting the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to raise interest rates to defend it.
Other currencies in the region have not been spared, with Malaysia’s ringgit approaching its weakest level since 1998 when the Asian financial crisis occurred. The Indian rupee was also trading near the record low it reached in August 2013.
Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said the weak peso was an expected reaction of the local currency to the anticipated early rate increase by the US Federal Reserve, with other Asian currencies also moving in the same direction.
“We are watching the currency movements very closely. We seem to be moving in the same direction as the other currencies. We just want to avoid abrupt changes in the exchange rates,” Dominguez said.
But he added that the country’s rock-solid macroeconomic fundamentals will enable the domestic economy to survive external shocks such as higher US interest rates and a stronger dollar.
Undersecretary Gil Beltran, chief economist at the Department of Finance (DOF), said the strengthening of the dollar against the peso “is expected as an impact of the Fed normalization.”
“The peso is just normalizing. It was P57 per the US dollar in 2004. All other currencies are moving in the same direction,” he said.
With interest rates on American government bonds now rising, investors have begun shifting their focus on the United States, which means that countries like the Philippines, Malaysia, Korea, Thailand and other Asian economies are seeing their currencies weakening against the dollar.
The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp. (HSBC) has lowered its forecast for the baht to 35.70 to the dollar by year-end, down from an earlier forecast of 34.60.
In an earlier report, the Wall Street Journal said the yen “dropped to its weakest level in five months against the dollar even though Japan’s economy grew at a better-than-expected rate of 2.2 percent in the third quarter.”
It reported that, “the yen was last down 0.8 percent at ¥107.49, continuing its slide since the US election outcome sparked a broad-based rise in the dollar against major currencies.”
“The Indonesian rupiah, the Korean won and the Indian rupee were among several emerging-market currencies to suffer against the US dollar (last week), while China’s central bank set the yuan at a more than seven-year low versus the greenback in mainland markets,” the Wall Street Journal reported.