Monday May 12, 12:16 PM
Emerging FX-Asia mostly down, but yuan rises on policy hopes
SINGAPORE, May 12 (Reuters) - Most Asian currencies fell on
Monday as rising oil prices prodded investors to trim risky
positions, but China's yuan gained on expectations policy
makers would let it rise to fight inflation of more than 8
percent.
The Thai baht fell to a 2-1/2-month low of 32.2
per dollar, down almost 0.4 percent from late Asian trade on
Friday, as investors bought the U.S. currency to stop losses.
"Hedge funds are buying the dollar versus the baht and
demand also comes from oil companies," said a trader in in
Bangkok.
The Philippine peso dropped to 42.63 per dollar,
down a third of a percent from Friday's close.
The Indonesian rupiah also lost 0.3 percent to 9,264
per dollar.
The peso and rupiah are seen vulnerable to soaring crude
oil prices, which hit a fresh record high late on Friday of
$126.27. They held within sight of the high on Monday, at
$125.64 a barrel.
The dollar was steady against major currencies after a
two-day slide as investors awaited more clues on the policy
outlooks for the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank.
The Chinese yuan rose as far as 6.9828 per
dollar, approaching its post-revaluation high of 6.9824 hit on
April 23, after the central bank set a stronger mid-point.
The dollar's broad strength in recent weeks had helped slow
the rise in the Chinese yuan, sparking a sharp yuan sell-off in
offshore forward markets on speculation the Chinese government
was trying to slow the currency's rise to support exporters.
Most analysts expect the yuan to rise further as policy
makers need a stronger currency to fight inflation, which data
showed on Monday accelerated to 8.5 percent in April from 8.3
percent in March. [ID:nPEK329472]
"We believe that policy makers still like to appreciate the
yuan against a basket of currencies of China's major trading
partners to reach external balance and to combat inflation,"
analysts at Merrill Lynch said in a note.
The yuan in one-year non-deliverable forwards trading rebounded to 6.53 per dollar, implying annual
appreciation of about 7 percent, much lower than 10 percent
appreciation that was priced in last month.
Claudio Piron and Yen Ping Ho, currency strategists at
JPMorgan, suggested that investors should buy the yuan in
offshore forward markets, targeting short-dated contracts.
"We view the sharp dollar/yuan NDF unwind as providing
attractive entry levels for short dollar/yuan positions," they
said in a note.
Markets in South Korean are closed for a holiday.
CURRENCIES VS U.S. DOLLAR
Change on the day at 0352 GMT
Currency Latest bid Previous day Pct Move
Japan yen 103.47 103.12 -0.34
Sing dlr 1.3697 1.3687 -0.07
Taiwan dlr 30.741 30.653 -0.29
Baht 32.16 31.93 -0.72
Peso 42.61 42.48 -0.31
Rupiah 9258.00 9237.00 -0.23
Rupee 41.60 41.58 -0.04
Ringgit 3.2145 3.1955 -0.59
Yuan 6.9831 6.9918 +0.12
Change so far in 2008
Currency Latest bid End prev year Pct Move
Japan yen 103.47 111.33 +7.60
Sing dlr 1.3697 1.4382 +5.00
Taiwan dlr 30.741 32.443 +5.54
Korean won 1043.90 935.70 -10.36
Baht 32.16 33.68 +4.73
Peso 42.61 41.28 -3.12
Rupiah 9258.00 9390.00 +1.43
Rupee 41.60 39.41 -5.25
Ringgit 3.2145 3.3050 +2.82
Yuan 6.9831 7.3041 +4.60
(Reporting by Kevin Yao and Neil Fullick)
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