Asian FX bulls return as dollar slips

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Investors turned bullish on most Asian currencies, a Reuters poll found, as easing bets of a sooner-than-expected hike in US interest rates drove down US Treasury yields and curbed the dollar’s interest rate advantage.

Sentiment towards currencies of export-focused nations with lower COVID-19 cases improved the most, the fortnightly poll of 13 respondents found. Bearish views on the Indian rupee, however, rose sharply as COVID-19 cases surged in the country.

The spike in US Treasury yields last month has reversed course, as worries over a potential acceleration in inflation faded, while the US Federal Reserve also made it clear that it would not hike interest rates anytime soon.

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As a result, investors have pulled out of the greenback, sending it to multi-week lows.

“The US central bank continues to hold the stance that a rise in inflation may be transitory,” said Daniel Dubrovsky, a strategist at IG’s DailyFX.

“I believe what we are seeing is a relief rally in ASEAN FX. This could continue if the Fed remains dovish as the growth story plays out. Only time will tell what will happen between growth and inflation.”

Long bets on the yuan stood at their highest in nearly two months, as China’s economic recovery quickened sharply in the first quarter to record growth of 18.3 percent from last year’s coronavirus slump, led by exports. \

Bullish positions on the Singapore and Taiwanese dollars were at their highest since early and late February, respectively, as exports data painted pictures of strong growth.

Long positions on the Philippine peso were at a more than two-month high, as data showed the country’s trade deficit shrank in February while remittances, an important source of dollars to the country, grew after months of declines.

Bearish bets on India’s rupee climbed to their highest since last April, as a virus surge halted what was recently seen as a promising growth story in the region.

Markets were aggressively pricing in hawkish Reserve Bank of India monetary policy expectations too, which unwound after the central bank revealed at its policy meeting this month that it was still dovish, DailyFX’sDubrovsky said.

“So combine this with surging COVID-19 cases and prospects of tightening look increasingly grim, leaving the rupee vulnerable in the near term,” Dubrovsky said.

India on Thursday reported more than 300,000 coronavirus daily cases, the highest daily global total. Vaccinations, in contrast, have been sluggish and healthcare facilities severely strained, prompting widespread curbs. – Reuters

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