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Emerging Markets at Mercy of Yuan Swings as Currency War Looms

The People’s Bank of China last week fixed the currency past 6.7 per dollar for the first time in almost a year.

Emerging Markets at Mercy of Yuan Swings as Currency War Looms
Genuine bundles of Chinese one-hundred yuan banknotes are arranged for a photograph at the Counterfeit Notes Response Center of KEB Hana Bank in Seoul, South Korea. (Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- China’s yuan is back at the top of emerging-market investor worries as the deepening standoff between the U.S. and China over trade threatens to evolve into a currency battle.

As the dollar strengthens amid the trade tensions, the slide in the yuan is spurring concern that China might be embracing purposeful devaluation as a policy tool. That stoked the ire of U.S. President Donald Trump, who accused the country and the European Union of manipulating their currencies. China’s foreign ministry spokesman said Monday the country has no desire to boost its exports through competitive devaluation while the nation’s sound economic fundamentals are providing support to the currency.

“The yuan’s definitely weighing on risk, although much more so on Asia,” said Edwin Gutierrez, the London-based head of emerging-market sovereign debt at Aberdeen Standard Investments. “But we are confident that the Chinese will not let things get disorderly. Having recently won the battle against capital outflows, they’re not about to stoke those again by letting the currency depreciate significantly.”

The People’s Bank of China last week fixed the currency past 6.7 per dollar for the first time in almost a year and on Friday weakened the reference rate the most in two years. On Monday, the PBOC strengthened the yuan’s fixing by 0.12 percent to 6.7593, though it was still slightly weaker than traders and analysts had expected. The offshore yuan erased its gain to trade lower at 10:30 a.m. in London.

A further drop in the Chinese currency to 7 against the dollar may trigger another round of panic selling in emerging markets, Gutierrez said. The currency regained some ground on Friday after a big Chinese bank sold dollars, traders said.

Chasing a Weaker Yuan is Probably the Wrong Trade, Goldman Says

Emerging Markets at Mercy of Yuan Swings as Currency War Looms

Asian currencies, including the South Korean won and Indonesian rupiah, have borne the brunt of the sell-off in emerging markets this month, with the yuan the worst performer after Turkey’s lira.

The Argentine and Mexican peso as well as Brazil’s real have been the top-performing developing-nation currencies this month. Aberdeen Standard has been overweight Latin American currencies “for quite a while,” Gutierrez said.

Erdogan Era

  • With the majority of economists expecting a rate hike of at least one percentage point by Turkey’s central bank on Tuesday, traders will be glued to the results of policy makers’ first meeting since the re-election of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Inflation soared to 15.4 percent in June, about three times the central bank’s target
  • “In the case of a continuation of loose fiscal and quasi-fiscal policies, the CBT is likely to be forced to hike further in the rest of the year,” Morgan Stanley analysts wrote in an emailed note

Other Rate Decisions

  • After the Bank of Russia adopted a hawkish tone at its meeting in June, economists see rate setters keeping their benchmark on hold at 7.25 percent on Friday. From a planned increase in value-added tax next year to ruble weakness and steady gains in wages, inflation pressures are building, according to BCS Financial Group
  • Morgan Stanley economists including Pasquale Diana expect a “somewhat cautious tone” when Hungarian policy makers meet on Tuesday, despite rates having eased since their last decision. Dovish monetary policy makes currencies such as Hungary’s forint and Poland’s zloty vulnerable to capital outflows, according to Warsaw-based mBank analysts led by Ernest Pytlarczyk. The regulator may leave the base rate at a record-low 0.9 percent, according to all economists in a Bloomberg survey
  • Nigeria announces its rate decision on Tuesday, with markets mostly expecting it to hold at a record-high of 14 percent. While inflation is slowing, a pickup in outflows in the past few months amid the emerging-market sell-off may make the central bank wary of easing monetary policy
  • Ghana, Chile, Georgia and Colombia will also decide on rates

Former Cricket Hero for Prime Minister?

  • Pakistan voters go to the polls Wednesday with the incumbent Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz and former cricket star Imran Khan’s Tehreek-e-Insaf, or Movement for Justice, almost neck-and-neck. The nation’s fast-deteriorating economy means that whoever wins will likely have to go to the International Monetary Fund for another bailout. The benchmark KSE100 Index of stocks this month fell to the lowest level since 2017
  • READ: No Winners Seen for Investors in Pakistan Neck-and-Neck Election

Brazil’s Presidential Race

  • Developments in Brazil’s presidential race could influence local markets after the Democratic Workers Party, or PDT, endorsed leftist Ciro Gomes. Traders will also eye confirmation that Brazil’s “centrao” coalition has agreed to back former Sao Paulo Governor Geraldo Alckmin, as reported by local media. Support for Alckmin, a market-friendly candidate who has been lagging behind in recent polls, could give him as much as 40 percent of total television ad time. The real has trailed major peers this year
  • Brazil economic data for release include the current account, trade and loans. Weaker-than-expected data is another reason for the underperformance of Brazilian assets. The biggest exchange-traded fund, the iShares MSCI Brazil ETF, earlier this month suffered it sharpest daily outflow since 2015

Other Economic Data

  • South Korea will report its preliminary figure for gross domestic product on Thursday. The government lowered its forecast for Asia’s fourth-largest economy on July 18 to 2.9 percent from an earlier 3 percent, citing rising global trade tensions. That follows the move of Bank of Korea, which revised down its 2018 estimate to 2.9 percent while leaving the inflation outlook unchanged
  • The Philippines reported on Monday a budget deficit of 54.3 billion pesos ($1 billion) for June. That took the shortfall for the first six months of the year to 193 billion pesos, compared with a deficit of 154.5 billion pesos in the year-earlier period. President Rodrigo Duterte needs 9 trillion pesos to fund a program to build roads and railways through 2022. The government forecasts its budget deficit will swell to 3.2 percent of gross domestic product in 2019, which would be the highest in nine years, from a projected 3 percent this year
  • Taiwan’s industrial output rose 0.36 percent in June from a year earlier, while the jobless rate was little changed at 3.68 percent; the local dollar strengthened
  • Mexico-watchers also have their pick of economic figures, with data due on inflation, retail sales, trade and unemployment. The Mexican peso has surprised many analysts with a stronger-than-expected performance after the presidential election, leading Morgan Stanley to revise its forecast for the year

--With assistance from Alec D.B. McCabe and Andrew Janes.

To contact the reporters on this story: Netty Ismail in Dubai at nismail3@bloomberg.net;Lilian Karunungan in Singapore at lkarunungan@bloomberg.net;Aline Oyamada in Sao Paulo at aoyamada3@bloomberg.net;Alex Nicholson in Moscow at anicholson6@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dana El Baltaji at delbaltaji@bloomberg.net, Justin Carrigan

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.