Showing posts with label charmaine sheh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charmaine sheh. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 June 2010

The Yuan & The Ringgit, Missing Cousins



Before the weekend, the ringgit was at 3.25 to the USD, this morning it went to 3.19. The Chinese renminbi has been effectively pegged to the U.S. dollar since late 2008, as one of the supportive policies put in place during the global recession. This peg, and the fact that it impeded other countries adjustments, has contributed to international pressure, especially from the U.S., to allow more flexibility of the exchange rate as Chinese exports rebounded.

Ahead of the G-20 meeting, on June 19, 2010, the People's Bank of China announced the intention to move towards a more flexible exchange rate regime by allowing the currency to move within a band against a basket of currencies of its major trading partners.
The statement, coming less than a week before G-20 leaders meet in Toronto on June 26-27, represents a departure from a two-year period during which the RMB was effectively pegged to the dollar.

An increase in inflationary pressures and stronger export growth led market actors to expect some appreciation against the USD by mid 2010. However, the RMB's significant rise against the EUR, and thus on a trade weighted basis, could deter significant appreciation against the USD and should the EUR fall further against the USD, so too might the RMB.


Despite market expectations of a major move, any shift might be modest. Standard Chartered's Stephen Green said in the FT: "The danger is that on Monday morning everyone gets very excited and then end up being disappointed with what happens. There is very little appetite for appreciation, so in the short-term the central bank is likely to be very conservative."

Charmaine Sheh Sze-man (佘詩曼)

The initial response to the statement has been positive, with the U.S. and European leaders lauding the decision. Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Managing Director of the IMF suggested that the move was in line with the "G-20 Mutual Assessment Process, to be presented in Toronto..., and will help increase Chinese household income and provide the incentives necessary to reorient investment toward industries that serve the Chinese consumer." The move also suggests that the G-20 will be more focused on the development in the eurozone.

Morgan Stanley's Qing Wang argues that an exit of renminbi from the US$ peg will come most likely in the Summer of 2010 (early Q3) involving a one-off revaluation of 2-3%, followed by gradual appreciation for a total strengthening of 4-5% in 2010. China is likely to exit the peg given its role in reducing imported inflation, because a free and open trade system is in China's interest, helps rebalance the domestic economy towards the non-tradable sector, and to move to a more flexible exchange rate needed for independent monetary policy. A move in July gives the U.S. administration the ability to claim successful diplomacy and Chinese to show their global responsibility before the November G20 meeting.

On April 8, 2010, the People's Bank of China sold RMB15 billion in three-year sterilization bills, the first batch since June 2008. The three-year bills are considered a more aggressive tool for managing liquidity, and may signal that the central bank is preparing to sterilize "hot money" inflows betting on RMB appreciation.

Greater CNY flexibility may lead to some initial nominal appreciation against G3. Other Asian currencies – especially those that are regarded as proxies for Chinese growth and commodity demand (AUD) - or non-FX assets in China (e.g., Shanghai A-share Index) may end up attracting greater inflows and seeing a bigger price action.

The expectation that a stronger CNY will support China’s demand for imports (including from the rest of Asia) can be beneficial for Malaysian Ringgit, Korean Won and Taiwan Dollar. Central banks across Asia may also feel a bit less pressure to stem FX appreciation in order to maintain competitiveness. The entire playbook would favour going long on the following currencies for the rest of 2010: long CNY, KRW, MYR and INR. Short the EUR and JPY. That being the case, the natural long will see a boost in financial assets in those respective countries.

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Monday, 5 April 2010

Oil Price Breakout, Signaling Commodities Uptrend

Oil prices jumped to near US$86 a barrel Monday in Asia, extending gains from last week as investors bet an improving US job market will herald growing crude demand.

charmaine-sheh-0002 by crazy_7360.

Benchmark crude for May delivery was up 80 US cents to US$85.67 a barrel at midday Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract climbed up US$1.11 to settle at US$84.87 on Thursday following a gain of US$1.39 on Wednesday. Global oil trading was closed for the Good Friday holiday.

Oil broke out of its multi-month trading range today. Oil bulls are hoping this is the start of another run higher, while most consumers are probably thinking "not again."

Crude has jumped from US$69 a barrel in early February on expectations a growing US economy will eventually spark higher oil consumption.

On Friday, the US Labour Department said employers added 162,000 jobs in March, the largest job gain in three years. The unemployment rate stayed at 9.7 per cent for the third straight month.

'The market was positive before but now it's been confirmed,' said Clarence Chu, a trader with market maker Hudson Capital Energy in Singapore. 'If the job growth can be sustained for several months, we'll definitely see crude demand pick up.'

In other Nymex trading in May contracts, heating oil rose 2.09 US cents to US$2.2376 a gallon, and gasoline gained 2.10 US cent to US$2.3442 a gallon. Natural gas jumped 1.5 US cents to US$4.101 per 1,000 cubic feet. In London, Brent crude was up 71 US cents at US$84.72 on the ICE futures exchange.

Oil is the leader for all commodities, the following weeks should see the other commodities, including soft commodities, finding reasons to surge alongside oil.

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