Friday 14 August 2015

Asian currencies recover after yuan-cut rout

Asian currencies gained on Thursday, rebounding from the worst two-day rout in almost 20 years after China reassured markets it would not engage in a currency war. 

Emerging market currencies including the Indonesian rupiah, Philippine peso and South Korean won rose slightly against the dollar after China on Thursday trimmed its yuan reference rate 1.1 per cent. 

The cut, which was smaller than those in the previous two days, and news the central bank intervened to stablise the yuan on Wednesday reassured dealers Beijing would not allow its currency to slump Share Market Astrology

"It's likely the worst is over," Patrick Bennett, a strategist at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce in Hong Kong, told Bloomberg News. 

"PBOC intervention has calmed the market. There is not a sense that the onshore yuan will weaken forever." 

In Tokyo afternoon trade the dollar changed hands at 124.39 yen, up from 124.24 yen in New York, where it took a hit on fears Beijing's moves underscored weakness in China's economy and could delay a US interest rate hike Jackpot Stocks Trading Tips

China's latest devaluation comes after two previous cuts, on Tuesday and Wednesday, sparked concerns that the world's number two economy, long an engine for world growth, is weaker than previously thought. 

The move sent Asia-Pacific currencies plummeting, pushing the Malaysian ringgit to 17-year lows, on fears the cut could hurt other regional economies and spark a race to the bottom by central banks in a bid to keep their exports competitive Himanshu Tiwari Astrologer

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home