Ringgit crackdown saps volatility, deters investors

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Monitoing Desk

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s crackdown on currency speculators has come at a cost. While it has successfully reduced ringgit volatility, it is threatening to discourage overseas investors.
The central bank’s steps to curb trading in offshore non-deliverable forwards last year has made it harder for global funds to hedge their exposure to Malaysia, according to Macquarie Bank Ltd.
Global funds cut holdings of Malaysian debt by a combined 25.2 billion ringgit ($5.7 billion) in November and December, the biggest two months of outflows since 2008, central bank data show.
The difference between onshore and forward prices for the ringgit jumped to a record in November, spurring the central bank to crack down on NDF trading. Since then, the currency’s volatility has dwindled to the lowest in four years, while the ringgit slid to the weakest since 1998 even as oil prices stabilized and the central bank dismissed speculation it was about to impose capital controls.
“The initial imposition of the NDF restrictions did lead to talk of the potential of further restrictions and even capital account closure,” said Julian Wee, a senior market strategist at National Australia Bank in Singapore.
“These sort of measures tend to lead to a loss of confidence in the market, which was already jittery. However, the overall direction and movement in the dollar-ringgit has been due to the overall dollar trend in addition to BNM’s inability to resist it.”
A measure of one-month volatility for the ringgit has tumbled since mid-November when the central bank warned foreign banks not to engage in NDF-related transactions, turning the currency into emerging Asia’s least volatile, from the most. Volatility dropped to 2.5 percent last week, the lowest since December 2012.
The ringgit has fallen almost 2 percent since Nov. 15, the region’s worst performer after the yen, and reached 4.5002 per dollar on Jan. 4, the weakest since the Asian financial crisis. The currency will slide to 4.53 by mid-year, according to a Bloomberg survey. It was at 4.4370 as of 12:12 p.m. in Kuala Lumpur on Tuesday.
Not everyone is pessimistic. United Overseas Bank Ltd. predicts the ringgit will strengthen to 4.35 per dollar by June 30 as it regains a positive correlation with crude oil. Oil-related products are Malaysia’s second-largest export.
“The ringgit’s previously high-beta or sensitivity to dollar moves is clearly diminished,” said Peter Chia, a currency strategist at UOB in Singapore. “Factors in favor of a firmer ringgit include our estimated fair value of 3.90 and a return of the positive correlation to firmer oil prices.”
Bank Negara blamed the “opaque” offshore NDF market for worsening the pressure on the ringgit and said the currency’s pricing should never be disconnected from real economic activities in the onshore market.
Traders remain wary even after central bank Governor Muhammad Ibrahim allowed for greater hedging flexibility in the onshore currency market in an attempt to discourage the use of NDFs.
In measures that took effect in December, Bank Negara pledged to ensure there would be “continuous liquidity of foreign currency” in the onshore market, and placed a cap on the amount of export proceeds companies can hold in foreign currency.
Malaysia’s dwindling foreign-exchange reserves mean it has less power to defend its currency. Reserves dropped to a 14-month low of $94.3 billion, according to the most recent data through Jan. 13. The country is the only one in Southeast Asia to have seen reserves decline in each of the past four years.
The ringgit is poised to end this year at 4.80 per dollar, close to the record low of 4.8850 reached in January 1998, according to NizamIdris, head of foreign-exchange and fixed-income strategy at Macquarie Bank Ltd. in Singapore.
The NDF crackdown has done some harm for market players, he said. “While Bank Negara can say the onshore USD/MYR deliverable forward market could provide that hedge option, it is less liquid, certainly for after hours trades. The cost of hedging for foreign investors has definitely risen at the margin.”