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Emerging Asia’s US$5 trillion reserves put to test in currency war

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 5 min read
Emerging Asia’s US$5 trillion reserves put to test in currency war
(Aug 7): It used to be that a buildup in foreign reserves was seen as a bulwark against currency shocks and swift turns in investor sentiment.
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(Aug 7): It used to be that a buildup in foreign reserves was seen as a bulwark against currency shocks and swift turns in investor sentiment.

Those days seem far away -- and that defense less robust -- as the trade conflict between the US and China evolves into a full-blown currency war that’s threatening emerging markets globally. Reserves of central banks in developing Asian nations, which have risen to almost US$5 trillion ($6.9 trillion) this year, will now be put to the test as currencies slide.

“The key lesson from 2008 is that you can never have too much reserves,” said Taimur Baig, chief economist at DBS Group Holdings in Singapore, referring to the global financial crisis more than a decade ago. “But they were for fighting a fire in a conventional world,” noting that today’s environment is quite unconventional.

Central banks in Thailand, India, Indonesia and South Korea boosted their reserves this year as global policy easing fueled foreign inflows and pushed their currencies higher. Now, the worsening trade tensions and fears of a currency war are increasing the threat of outflows as investors turn risk-averse.

Outflows

For countries like Indonesia and India, which run current-account deficits and are prone to sell-offs, central banks may need to dip into their reserves to support their currencies. In Thailand, where the baht has been gaining, officials will be under pressure to intervene on the opposite side.

The upshot is that healthy reserves that normally act as a stabilizer for emerging markets may lack the potency under current conditions.

“A better FX reserve buffer does, in theory, provide a stronger base from which Asian central banks can deal with pressures on their local currencies,” said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank in Singapore.

“Nonetheless, it merely mitigates, but does not eliminate, the risks associated with destabilising capital flows,” he said. “And that will remain a very large worry.”

Here’s a look at how economies across emerging Asia may use their reserves to help weather the turmoil:

India

India’s reserves are holding near a record US$430 billion. The central bank doesn’t target any level for the rupee, but intervenes to curb volatility. Of late, that’s meant bolstering the currency as it remains down against the greenback in 2019. Bloomberg Economics estimates the central bank may have sold US$1.27 billion from its reserves in the week ended July 26, after having bought US$0.43 billion a week earlier.

The rupee has fallen almost 3% against the dollar this month, the biggest drop in Asia. India runs a perennial current-account deficit and is dependent on foreign investments to plug a hole in domestic savings. Those inflows usually dry up during times of volatility in global financial markets.

Indonesia

Officials in Southeast Asia’s biggest economy have made it clear they intend to take swift action to support the rupiah amid the latest bout of volatility. Bank Indonesia Deputy Governor Dody Budi Waluyo on Monday said the bank “will be in the market to ensure the value of the rupiah stays in line with its fundamentals.”

Indonesia has been rebuilding its reserves this year, which climbed in July to US$126 billion -- their highest level in 16 months -- after the central bank last year drained billions to counter the rupiah’s slump.

“Drawing on its foreign reserves war chest to combat rupiah volatility is an option, but not the only option,” said Enrico Tanuwidjaja, the head of economics and research for PT UOB Indonesia in Jakarta.

South Korea

After nearly going bankrupt in the Asian financial crisis, South Korea has become one of the more diligent in stacking foreign reserves, which stands now at more than US$400 billion.

The role of the reserves as a backstop to fluctuations in the won is now getting tested on multiple fronts. South Korea’s close trade ties with China have put it in the crossfire of the US-China trade war, and it is also fighting its own trade conflict with Japan.

South Korea’s won breached the key 1,200 support level on Monday, with the foreign exchange authority calling the currency’s moves “excessive” and “abnormal.” On Tuesday, Bank of Korea Governor Lee Ju-yeol said stability in the foreign exchange was “more important than anything,” convening an emergency meeting after the US labelled China as a currency manipulator overnight.

Thailand

As a safe haven currency in the region, the baht has surged this year on the back of foreign inflows, a trend that authorities are trying to curb to avoid further damage to the export and tourism industries.

The central bank’s intervention has pushed up reserves to a record-high of more than US$218 billion, and officials are calling on them to do more. The healthy reserves are now equivalent to more than 40% of the country’s gross domestic product.

There’s no sign the baht -- which is up almost 6% against the dollar this year -- will lose its haven status anytime soon, given Thailand’s history of current-account surpluses and recent moves by Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings to raise the nation’s credit-rating outlook positive.

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