Ringgit rises most in a month on bet Fed to hold rates past June
Posted by Trading Advisor on 2:34 PM with No comments
KLSE stock picks [KUALA LUMPUR] Malaysia's ringgit rose the most in a month on growing speculation the Federal Reserve will delay raising interest rates until the second half, supporting demand for the nation's stocks and bonds.
The ringgit gained 0.7 per cent, the biggest advance since Feb 25, to
3.7060 a dollar as of 9:46 am in Kuala Lumpur, data compiled by
Bloomberg show. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed after
posting its steepest loss last week since 2011.
Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart and Chicago Fed chief Charles
Evans acknowledged that a stronger dollar was a headwind to economic
growth, after the central bank indicated it will go slowly with policy
tightening once it starts. That may help ease pressure on the ringgit,
Asia's worst-performing currency in the past six months, after Fitch
Ratings warned last week that there's more than a 50 per cent chance of a
credit downgrade.
"The markets have become more confident of the Fed delaying rate
hikes," said Masashi Murata, a currency strategist at Brown Brothers
Harriman & Co in Tokyo. "They have priced in that the Fed would
likely start to hike rates in September, not June." The FTSE Bursa
Malaysia KLCI Index of shares rose 0.3 per cent Monday, adding to last
week's 1.2 per cent increase. Five-year government bonds were steady
after the yield fell three basis points to 3.64 per cent in the five
days to March 20.
Categories: KLSE, Kuala Lumpur
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